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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Acoustoelectric properties of graphene and graphene nanostructures

Poole, Timothy January 2017 (has links)
The acoustoelectric effect in graphene and graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) on lithium niobate surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices was studied experimentally. Monolayer graphene produced by chemical vapour deposition was transferred to the SAW devices. The photoresponse of the acoustoelectric current (Iae) was characterised as a function of SAW frequency and intensity, and illumination wavelength (using 450 nm and 735 nm LEDs) and intensity. Under illumination, the measured Iae increased by more than the measured decrease in conductivity, while retaining a linear dependence on SAW intensity. The latter is consistent with the piezoelectric interaction between the graphene charge carriers and the SAWs being described by a relatively simple classical relaxation model. A larger increase in Iae under an illumination wavelength of 450 nm, compared to 735 nm at the same intensity, is consistent with the generation of a hot carrier distribution. The same classical relaxation model was found to describe Iae generated in arrays of 500 nm-wide GNRs. The measured acoustoelectric current decreases as the nanoribbon width increases, as studied for GNRs with widths in the range 200 – 600 nm. This reflects an increase in charge carrier mobility due to increased doping, arising from damage induced at the nanoribbon edges during fabrication. 2 Lastly, the acoustoelectric photoresponse was studied as a function of graphene nanoribbon width (350 – 600 nm) under an illumination wavelength of 450 nm. Under illumination, the nanoribbon conductivity decreased, with the largest percentage decrease seen in the widest GNRs. Iae also decreased under illumination, in contrast to the acoustoelectric photoresponse of continuous graphene. A possible explanation is that hot carrier effects under illumination lead to a greater decrease in charge carrier mobility than the increase in acoustoelectric attenuation coefficient. This causes the measured decrease in Iae.
2

Physical structural and behavioral integration of graphene devices

Yang, Yinxiao 01 April 2013 (has links)
The strategic importance of microelectronics is reflected in its ubiquity in the global production network and in our daily lives. Above all, the microelectronics revolution has been enabled and driven by the scalability of the silicon transistor and the computational efficiency of its CMOS architecture. While the semiconductor industry has been incredibly adept at pushing the boundaries of scaling in the last few decades, many factors suggest that silicon technology is running into scientific and practical limitations to further scaling. Thus, the push for a beyond-silicon computing platform is imperative. Akin to the transition from bipolar to MOSFET technology or from NMOS to CMOS architecture, the industry is once again looking for the next disruptive technology to continue the exponential growth of computing power. In 2004, two research groups, one from the University of Manchester and the other from Georgia Tech, reported on the electrical properties of ultrathin graphite. Their findings demonstrated the stability of graphene, an atomic layer of graphite, as well as its superb carrier mobility, spurring the semiconductor industry to invest in the material as a candidate for a beyond-silicon computing platform. Within this framework, this thesis explores the promise of graphene as a material and technological platform for electronic devices. The objectives of the thesis are (i) to elucidate opportunities and challenges in the design and fabrication of graphene field-effect devices, and (ii) to advance a new device platform based on graphene p-n junctions.
3

Graphene Nanostructures : A Theoretical Study Of Electronic, Magnetic And Structural Properties

Bhowmick, Somnath 05 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Graphene is a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in honeycomb lattice. Over a long period of time it was treated as a hypothetical material to understand the properties of other allotropes of carbon, such as graphite, carbon nanotube etc. Half decade back, a single layer of graphene was finally isolated and since then the field has observed a flurry of activities. Low energy excitations in graphene are massless Dirac Fermions and quantum electrodynamic effects can be observed at room temperature in graphene, which makes it very popular among the condensed matter community. In addition graphene also shows many interesting mesoscopic effects, which is the focus of the present work. We study the electronic, magnetic and structural properties of the graphene nanostructures. The entire thesis based on the results and findings obtained from the present investigation is organized as follows. Chapter 1: provides a general introduction to the properties of graphene and graphene based nanostructures. Chapter2:describes the theoretical tools used in this thesis to investigate the properties of graphene nanoribbons. The first two chapters are meant to give the reader an overview about the field of graphene and a few of the computational techniques commonly used to investigate the properties of graphene. The following chapters are the new findings reported in this thesis. Chapter3:shows how zigzag graphene nanoribbons respond in a non-linear fashion when edges are subjected to some external potential such as magnetic field. Such response originates from the edge states present in zigzag ribbons and thus not observed in armchair nanoribbons. In the limit of ribbon width W→∞, an edge magnetic field produces a moment of ~ 1/3 per edge atom even for an infinitesimally small field, which is clearly a signature of non-linear response. Response of a finite width nanoribbon is size dependent and also depends on ln(V), the applied field. This is akin to Weber-Fechner law of audio visual perceptions. It is interesting to note that nature does provide a “quantum realization” of this in the form of biological sensing organs like the ear and eye. The magnetic response is found to scale inversely with the ribbon width. Chapter4:deals with the magnetic properties of the zigzag graphene nanoribbon. This is also a special property of the geometry of the zigzag edges and not observed in armchair nanoribbons. Our investigation reveals that the electron-electron repulsion (Hubbard U) energy creates a delta function like edge magnetic field in zigzag graphene nanoribbons. Starting from this, magnetic properties of zigzag graphene nanoribbons can be qualitatively and quantitatively explained from the non-linear response of zigzag nanoribbons. Zigzag graphene nanoribbons can exist in two possible ‘magnetic states’: antiferro (AF) where the two opposite edges have antiparallel magnetic moment and ferro (FM) where moment is parallel in the two opposite edges. First we describe the properties of undoped zigzag nanoribbons. They have AF ground state. Continuum theory can explain the size dependent bandgap and magnetic moment of the ground state. We present the first explicit derivation of the gap. Then we show that hole doping can change the ground state to FM, which is metallic. Thus the system has the property of magnetoresistance, which can be exploited by doping zigzag graphene nanoribbons externally with some gate voltage or internally by some electron acceptor element, such as boron. The critical doping for transition depends inversely with the ribbon width. We have found that the ‘phase transition’ on hole doping is a common phenomena for zigzag terminated nanostructures, such as hexagonal nanodots. Chapter5:discusses the effects of random edge shapes and random potential (Anderson disorder) on the magnetic properties of zigzag graphene nanostructures. Defects and disorders in the form of edge shape randomness and random potentials arising from substrate are very common in graphene. Our study reveals that edge state magnetism is very robust to shape randomness of the terminating edges of nanostructures; as long as there are three to four repeat units of a zigzag edge, the edge state magnetism is preserved. We also discover some “high energy” edges (ones where the edge atoms have only one nearest neighbor) can have very large moments compared to even the zigzag edges. Edge magnetism is also found to be robust to relatively small Anderson disorders, because a slowly varying small potential does not scatter the edge states. Chapter6:reveals how edge functionalization by O atom and OHgroup changes the properties of the zigzag graphene nanoribbons. Functionalization by various different molecules is a very popular method of tuning the properties of graphene. We have shown that it is possible to tune the properties of zigzag graphene nanoribbons by edge functionalization. Further, we have found that structures with clustered functionalization leads to “spatially” varying electronic structure, which can lead to interesting possibilities for electronic devices. Chapter7:describes structural stability, electronic and magnetic properties of graphene nanoribbons in presence of topological defects such as Stone-Wales defects. Our study reveals that the sign of stress induced by a SW defect in a graphene nanoribbon depends on the orientation of the SW defect with respect to the ribbon edge and the relaxation of the structure to relieve this stress determines its stability. Local warping or wrinkles arise in graphene nanoribbon when the stress is compressive, while the structure remains planar otherwise. The specific consequences to armchair and zigzag graphene nanoribbon can be understood from the anisotropy of the stress induced by a SW defect embedded in bulk graphene. We also have found localized electronic states near the SW defect sites in a nanoribbon. However, warping results in delocalization of electrons in the defect states. We have observed that, in zigzag graphene nanoribbons magnetic ordering weakens due to the presence of SW defects at the edges and the ground state is driven towards that of a nonmagnetic metal.
4

A study on the on-surface synthesis of novel carbon-based nanoribbon structures / 新規炭素ナノリボンの表面合成に関する研究

Shaotang, Song 25 September 2017 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(エネルギー科学) / 甲第20728号 / エネ博第356号 / 新制||エネ||70(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院エネルギー科学研究科エネルギー基礎科学専攻 / (主査)教授 坂口 浩司, 教授 萩原 理加, 教授 佐川 尚 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Energy Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
5

Sub-Lithographic Patterning of Ultra-Dense Graphene Nanoribbon Arrays

Li, Ke 28 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
6

Structural Properties Of Defected Graphene Nanoribbons Under Tension: Molecular-dynamics Simulations

Tuzun, Burcu 01 February 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Structural properties of pristine and defected graphene nanoribbons have been investigated by stretching them under 5 percent and 10 percent uniaxial strain until fragmentation. The stretching process has been carried out by performing molecular dynamics simulations (MDS) at 1 K and 300 K to determine the temperature effect on the structure of the graphene nanoribbons. Results of the simulations indicated that temperature, edge shape of graphene nanoribbons and stretching speed have a considerable effect on structural properties, however they have a slight effect on the strain value. The maximum strain at which fracture occurs is found to be 46.41 percent whereas minimum strain value is calculated as 21.00 percent. On the other hand, the defect formation energy is strongly affected from temperature and edge shape of graphene nanoribbons. Stone-Wales formation energy is calculated as -1.60 eV at 1 K whereas -30.13 eV at 300 K for armchair graphene nanoribbon.
7

Modeling and optimization approaches for benchmarking emerging on-chip and off-chip interconnect technologies

Kumar, Vachan 07 January 2016 (has links)
Modeling approaches are developed to optimize emerging on-chip and off-chip electrical interconnect technologies and benchmark them against conventional technologies. While transistor scaling results in an improvement in power and performance, interconnect scaling results in a degradation in performance and electromigration reliability. Although graphene potentially has superior transport properties compared to copper, it is shown that several technology improvements like smooth edges, edge doping, good contacts, and good substrates are essential for graphene to outperform copper in high performance on-chip interconnect applications. However, for low power applications, the low capacitance of graphene results in 31\% energy savings compared to copper interconnects, for a fixed performance. Further, for characterization of the circuit parameters of multi-layer graphene, multi-conductor transmission line models that account for an alignment margin and finite width of the contact are developed. Although it is essential to push for an improvement in chip performance by improving on-chip interconnects, devices, and architectures, the system level performance can get severely limited by the bandwidth of off-chip interconnects. As a result, three dimensional integration and airgap interconnects are studied as potential replacements for conventional off-chip interconnects. The key parameters that limit the performance of a 3D IC are identified as the Through Silicon Via (TSV) capacitance, driver resistance, and on-chip wire resistance on the driver side. Further, the impact of on-chip wires on the performance of 3D ICs is shown to be more pronounced at advanced technology nodes and when the TSV diameter is scaled down. Airgap interconnects are shown to improve aggregate bandwidth by 3x to 5x for backplane and Printed Circuit Board (PCB) links, and by 2x for silicon interposer links, at comparable energy consumption.
8

Synthesis of Carbon Nanomaterials and Their Applications in the Oilfield

Lu, Wei 16 September 2013 (has links)
This dissertation explores the potential applications of nanotechnology in the oilfield including poly(vinyl alcohol) stabilized carbon black nanoparticles for oil exploration and temperature-responsive carbon black nanoparticles for enhanced oil recovery. Also, it describes the rational design of graphene nanoribbons via intercalating reactive metals into multi-walled carbon nanotubes followed by addition of vinyl monomers or haloalkanes. Efficient production and modification of these aforementioned nanomaterials will make them more attractive for applications in the oilfield and electronics materials. A method is reported for detecting the hydrocarbon in the porous media with stabilized nanoparticles that are capable of efficiently transporting hydrophobic molecules through oil-containing rocks and selectively releasing them when a hydrocarbon is encountered. Nano-sized carbon black was oxidized and then functionalized with poly(vinyl alcohol) via a coupling reaction between the polymer's hydroxyl groups and the carboxylic groups on oxidized carbon black. Breakthrough curves show that poly(vinyl alcohol)-coated oxidized carbon black was stable in synthetic sea brine at room temperature and could carry the 14C-labeled radioactive tracer 2,2ˊ,5,5ˊ-tetrachlorobiphenyl through rocks and then released the tracer upon exposure to hydrocarbon. Due to the temperature-sensitivity of hydrogen bonds, higher molecular weight poly(vinyl alcohol) was used to improve the stability of carbon black nanoparticles in synthetic sea brine at higher temperatures. After sulfation, high molecular weight poly(vinyl alcohol) could stabilized carbon black nanoparticles in American Petroleum Institute standard brine at high temperatures. Those nanoparticles could efficiently transport mass-tagged probe molecules through a variety of oil-field rock types and selectively released the probe molecules into the hydrocarbon-containing rocks. Those proof-of-concept chemical nanoreporters can potentially be used under conditions commonly observed in the reservoir, and aid in the recovery of oil that remains in place. Amphiphilic carbon nanoparticles have been prepared that are capable of reversibly transferring across the water/oil interface in a temperature-controlled manner. Nano-sized carbon black was oxidized and then functionalized with amphiphilic diblock polyethylene-b-poly(ethylene glycol) copolymers that were water-soluble at low-to-moderate temperatures but oil-soluble at higher temperatures. The correlation between the phase transfer temperature and the melting temperature of the hydrophobic block of the copolymers and the weight percent of hydrophilic block were investigated. The amphiphilic nanoparticles were used to stabilize oil droplets for demonstrating potential applications in reducing the water/oil interfacial tension, a key parameter in optimizing crude oil extraction from downhole reservoirs. Graphene nanoribbons free of oxidized surfaces can be prepared in large batches and 100% yield by splitting multi-walled carbon nanotubes with potassium vapor. If desired, exfoliation is attainable in a subsequent step using chlorosulfonic acid. The low-defect density of these GNRs is indicated by their electrical conductivity, comparable to that of graphene derived from mechanically exfoliated graphite. Additionally, cost-effective and potentially industrially scalable, in situ functionalization procedures for preparation of soluble graphene nanoribbons from commercially carbon nanotubes are presented. To make alkane-functionalized graphene nanoribbons, multi-walled carbon nanotubes were intercalated by sodium/potassium alloy under liquid-phase conditions, followed by addition of haloalkanes, while polymer-functionalized graphene nanoribbons were prepared via polymerizing vinyl monomers using potassium-intercalated graphene nanoribbons. The correlation between the splitting of MWCNTs, the intrinsic properties of the intercalants and the degree of graphitization of the starting MWCNTs has also been demonstrated. Those functionalized graphene nanoribbons could have applications in conductive composites, transparent electrodes, transparent heat circuits, and supercapcitors.
9

Towards a low temperature synthesis of graphene with small organic molecule precursors

Vargas Morales, Juan Manuel 13 January 2014 (has links)
Graphene, a 2D honeycomb lattice of sp² hybridized carbons, has attracted the attention of the scientific community not only for its interesting theoretical properties but also for its myriad of possible applications. The discovery of graphene led to the Nobel Prize in physics for 2010 to be awarded to Andrei Geim and Konstantin Novoselov. Since its discovery, many methods have been developed for the synthesis of this material. Two of those methods stand out for the growth of high quality and large area graphene sheets, namely, epitaxial growth from silicon carbide (SiC) and chemical vapor deposition (CVD). As it stands today, both methods make use of high concentrations of hydrogen (10-20%) in N₂ or Ar, high temperatures, and a vacuum system. Epitaxial growth from SiC in addition requires very expensive single crystal SiC wafers. In the case of CVD, organic molecules are used as the carbon source to grow graphene on a metal substrate. Although graphene has been grown on many metal substrates, the experiments highlighted here make use of copper as the metal substrate of choice since it offers the advantage of availability, low price, and, most importantly, because this substrate is self-limiting in other words, it mostly grows single layer graphene. Because the CVD method provides with a choice as for the carbon source to use, the following question arises: can a molecule, either commercially available or synthesized, be used as a carbon source that would allow for the synthesis of graphene under low temperatures, low concentrations of hydrogen and at atmospheric pressure? This dissertation focuses on the synthesis of graphene at lower temperatures by using carbon sources with characteristics that might make this possible. It also focuses on the use of forming gas (3% H₂ and 97% N₂ or Ar) in order to make the overall process a lot safer and cost effective. This dissertation contains two chapters on the synthesis of organic molecules of interest, and observations about their reactivity are included. CVD experiments were performed at atmospheric pressure, and under vacuum. In both instances forming gas was used as the annealing and carrier gas. Results from CVD at atmospheric pressure (CVDAP), using organic solvents as carbon sources, show that at 1000℃, low quality graphene was obtained. On the other hand, CVD experiments using a vacuum in the range of 25 mTorr to 1 Torr successfully produced good quality graphene. For graphene growth under vacuum conditions, commercially available and synthesized compounds were used. Attempts at growing graphene at 600℃ from the same carbon sources only formed amorphous carbon. These results point to the fact that good quality graphene can basically be grown from any carbonaceous material as long as the growth temperature is 1000℃ and the system is under vacuum. In addition to the synthesis of graphene at low temperatures, there is a great amount of interest on the synthesis of graphene nanoribbons (GNR’s) and, as with graphene, several approaches to their synthesis have been developed. One such method is the synthesis of GNRs encapsulated in carbon nanotubes. Experiments were conducted in which aluminosilicate nanotubes were used. These nanotubes provided for an easier interpretation of the Raman spectrum since the signals from the nanotubes do not interfere with those of the GNR’s as in the case when carbon nanotubes are used. The use of aluminosilicate nanotubes also allowed for the successful synthesis of GNR’s at temperatures as low as 200℃ when perylene was used as the carbon source.
10

Transporte Eletrônico em Phased Arrays de Nanofitas de Grafeno

Araújo, Francisco Ronan January 2017 (has links)
ARAÚJO, F. R. V. Transporte Eletrônico em Phased Arrays de Nanofitas de Grafeno. 2017. 70 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Física) – Centro de Ciências, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza, 2017. / Submitted by Pós-Graduação em Física (posgrad@fisica.ufc.br) on 2017-08-23T17:06:25Z No. of bitstreams: 1 2017_dis_frvaraujo.pdf: 3006955 bytes, checksum: 96cafe22b25ecd5c8d4c555c7a4a5c83 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Giordana Silva (giordana.nascimento@gmail.com) on 2017-08-23T17:44:16Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 2017_dis_frvaraujo.pdf: 3006955 bytes, checksum: 96cafe22b25ecd5c8d4c555c7a4a5c83 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-08-23T17:44:16Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 2017_dis_frvaraujo.pdf: 3006955 bytes, checksum: 96cafe22b25ecd5c8d4c555c7a4a5c83 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017 / Graphene, a layer of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb crystal lattice, has remarkable physical properties. After its experimental obtaining in 2004 by A. K. Geim and K. S. Novoselov, several researches were carried out aiming to understand such physical properties and several possibilities of applications were proposed. At the low energy limit, there is a linearity relationship between energy and momentum for the electric charge carriers in this material and, therefore, they behave as relativistic particles of zero mass, described by the Dirac equation. One of the implications is that the electron-associated eigenfunctions that cross a potential barrier may not undergo damping under certain circumstances, a phenomenon known as Klein's paradox. Even without damping, these eigenfunctions acquire a phase factors that may depend only on the height and width values of the potential barrier. In this study, we investigate the properties transport in two electronic devices that use this phenomenon and that may be associated to phased arrays (electronic systems that have several emitters of waves, mechanically or electromagnetic, properly organized). We studied the electronic transport mechanisms in these physical systems and performed numerical simulations of electrical conductance as a function of energy and electrical conductance as a function of the electric potential and it was observed that the direction of propagation of the electrons can be controlled by varying the values of height and width of potential barriers. / O grafeno, uma camada de átomos de carbono arranjados em uma rede cristalina honeycomb (favo de mel), possui propriedades físicas notáveis. Após sua obtenção experimental em 2004 por A. K. Geim e K. S. Novoselov, várias pesquisas foram realizadas objetivando compreender tais propriedades físicas e diversas possibilidades de aplicações foram propostas. No limite de baixas energias, existe uma relação de linearidade entre a energia e o momento para os portadores de carga elétrica nesse material e, com isso, os mesmos comportam-se como partículas relativísticas de massa nula, descritas pela equação de Dirac. Uma das implicações disso é que as autofunções associadas aos elétrons que atravessam uma barreira de potencial podem não sofrer amortecimento em dadas circunstâncias, fenômeno esse conhecido como paradoxo de Klein. Mesmo sem sofrer amortecimento, essas autofunções adquirem fatores de fase que podem depender apenas dos valores de altura e largura da barreira de potencial. Nesse trabalho investigamos as propriedades de transporte em dois dispositivos eletrônicos que utilizam-se desse fenômeno e que podem ser associados a phased arrays (sistemas eletrônicos que possuem vários emissores de ondas, mecânicas ou eletromagnéticas, devidamente organizados). Estudamos os mecanismos de transporte eletrônico nesses sistemas físicos e realizamos simulações numéricas da condutância elétrica em função da energia e da condutância elétrica em função do potencial elétrico e observamos que a direção de propagação dos elétrons pode ser controlada através da variação dos valores de altura e largura das barreiras de potencial.

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