Atomic Scale Properties of Chemically Doped Graphene
COFFEE_KLATCH · Invited
Abstract
In monolayer graphene, substitutional doping during growth can be used to alter its electronic properties. We used scanning tunneling microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, x-ray spectroscopy, and first principles calculations to characterize individual nitrogen dopants in monolayer graphene grown on a copper substrate. Individual nitrogen atoms were incorporated as graphitic dopants, and a fraction of the extra electron on each nitrogen atom was delocalized into the graphene lattice. The electronic structure of nitrogen-doped graphene was strongly modified only within a few lattice spacings of the site of the nitrogen dopant. These findings show that chemical doping is a promising route to achieving high-quality graphene films with a large carrier concentration. Ref: L. Zhao et al, \textit{Science} \textbf{333},999 (2011).
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Authors
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Abhay Pasupathy
Department of Physics, Columbia University, NY, Columbia University, Columbia University, NY, N