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Resumen de Structural and electrical characterization of doped graphene and carbon nanotube networks

Muhammad Zahir Iqbal

  • Graphene, a two-dimensional sp2-hybridized network of carbon atoms has received a remarkable cornucopia of new physics and served as a unique model system, due particularly to its electronic properties, which could have interesting applications in electronic, spintronic or quantum devices. The first part of the thesis describes the modulation of graphene¿s structural and electrical properties with various kinds of doping; such as deep ultraviolet irradiation in ambient atmosphere, deep ultraviolet light irradiation in different gaseous environments, and electron beam irradiation. We have fabricated graphene (exfoliated and chemical vapor deposition grown graphene) field effect transistors using photolithography and electron beam lithography and characterized with AFM, Raman spectroscopy and transport measurement using low noise standard lock-in amplifier technique. We have explored how the ultraviolet light exposure tunes the electrical properties of graphene in an ambient atmosphere, confirmed by the shift of Dirac point position towards positive gate voltage, revealing p-type doping for graphene without degradation of mobility. We found that the doping is stable for a time scale of months. This method became more useful when half the graphene device was exposed by ultraviolet light, while the other half part was covered by a mask to make a sharp p-n junction. The doping effect became more prominent and controllable when it was made in an oxygen environment. The most interesting phenomena were observed when doped graphene was restored to a pristine state using ultraviolet light irradiation in a nitrogen environment. Furthermore, we have investigated the doping tunability with ultraviolet light irradiation on mechanically exfoliated single-, bi-, and trilayer graphenes without significantly degrading its charge carrier mobility. In a further study, the structural deformation of graphene was investigated by irradiation of an electron beam. The graphene structure changes its phase in various stages, where graphene transforms gradually from a crystalline to a nanocrystalline form and after a certain irradiation time into an amorphous form. This irradiation effect acts as an n-type dopant for graphene. In this case, mobility decreases with the gradual increase of irradiation dose, which implies the formation of localized states. The second part of the thesis describes carbon nanotube networks as flexible and transparent electrodes for electronic devices, particularly for high frequency applications. The observed results show that at low frequencies, the impedance increases as the density of nanotube networks decreases, as expected. Both the real and imaginary parts of impedance (measured up to 20 GHz) abruptly decrease as the frequency increases over the cut-off frequency. The cut-off frequency not only depends on the carbon nanotube density of the network, but also on the sample geometry. The Nyquist diagram suggests a simple equivalent circuit composed of a parallel combination of a resistor and a capacitor. The experimental results are in line with calculations made by electrochemical spectroscopy simulations. The results show that the electrical behavior is mostly determined by the contact resistance between the nanotubes, which are in a completely disordered distribution in the network. We show that carbon nanotube flexible conducting films, which may be transparent, could be competitive for some applications, such as displays, photovoltaic solar cells or selective sensors.


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