• Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • Home
  • The Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Digital Edition
    • CIAdvanced Digital Edition
    • Subscribe
    • Archives
  • News
  • Features
  • Resources
    • Advertiser Index
    • Blogs
    • Raw and Manufactured Materials Overview
    • eNewsletters
    • Classifieds & Services Marketplace
    • Buyers' Connection
    • List Rental
    • Market Trends
    • Material Properties Charts
    • Custom Content & Marketing Services
    • CI Top 12
    • Virtual Supplier Brochures
  • Directories
    • Data Book & Buyers Guide
    • Ceramic Components Directory
    • Materials Handbook
    • Equipment Digest
    • R&D Lab Equipment and Instrumentation
    • Services Directory
  • CI Home
Home » Boron Nitride Improves Edges of Graphene Nanoribbons
CI Advanced FeaturesAdvanced CeramicsTopics
Materials Innovation

Boron Nitride Improves Edges of Graphene Nanoribbons

Using inert boron nitride instead of silica creates precise zigzag edges in monolayer graphene.

Boron Nitride Graphene Nanoribbons
Etched Graphene uneven
Graphene etched with an underlying silica substrate produces uneven edges (left) but forms precise edges when placed on boron nitride. (Images by Guangyu Zhang.)
Boron Nitride Graphene Nanoribbons
Etched Graphene uneven
September 1, 2016
KEYWORDS boron / ceramics in electronics / graphene / nanomaterials
Reprints
No Comments

It is now feasible to make a prized material for spintronic devices and semiconductors: monolayer graphene nanoribbons with zigzag edges. Miniscule ribbons of graphene are desirable building blocks for semiconductor devices because of their predicted electronic properties, but making these nanostructures has remained a challenge. A team of researchers from China and Japan have devised a new method to make the structures in the lab; their findings appear in the current issue of Applied Physics Letters.

“Many studies have predicted the properties of graphene nanoribbons with zigzag edges,” said Guangyu Zhang, senior author on the study. “But in experiments it’s very hard to actually make this material.”

Researchers have previously tried to make graphene nanoribbons by placing sheets of graphene over a layer of silica and using atomic hydrogen to etch strips with zigzag edges, a process known as anisotropic etching. These edges are crucial to modulate the nanoribbon’s properties. This method only worked well to make ribbons that had two or more graphene layers, however. Irregularities in silica created by electronic peaks and valleys roughen its surface, so creating precise zigzag edges on graphene monolayers was a challenge. Zhang and his colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing Key Laboratory for Nanomaterials and Nanodevices, and the Collaborative Innovation Center of Quantum Matter teamed up with Japanese collaborators from the National Institute for Materials Science to solve the problem.


New Solution

The team replaced the underlying silica with boron nitride, a crystalline material that’s chemically sluggish and has a smooth surface devoid of electronic bumps and pits. By using this substrate and the anisotropic etching technique, the group successfully made graphene nanoribbons that were only one layer thick and had well-defined zigzag edges.

“This is the first time we have ever seen that graphene on a boron nitride surface can be fabricated in such a controllable way,” Zhang said.

The zigzag-edged nanoribbons showed high electron mobility in the range of 2,000 cm2/Vs, even at widths of less than 10 nm (reportedly the highest value ever reported for these structures), and created clean, narrow energy band gaps, which makes them promising materials for spintronic and nano-electronic devices.

“When you decrease the width of the nanoribbons, the mobility decreases drastically because of edge defects,” said Zhang. “Using standard lithography fabrication techniques, studies have seen mobility of 100 cm2/Vs or even lower, but our material still exceeds 2,000 cm2/Vs even at the sub-10 nanometer scale, demonstrating that these nanoribbons are of very high quality.” 

In future studies, extending this method to other kinds of substrates could enable the quick large-scale processing of monolayers of graphene to make high-quality nanoribbons with zigzag edges.  


For more information, visit www.aip.org.

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to Ceramic Industry Magazine.

Related Articles

Breakthrough in Low-Cost, Defect-Free Graphene Production

Cost-Effective Aluminum Nitride Powders for High Thermal Conductivity Resins

End Uses Evolving for Hexagonal Boron Nitride

Flat Boron by the Numbers

Related Products

Handbook of Advanced Ceramics Machining

The Golden Age of Karatsu Stoneware

Fractography of Glasses and Ceramics V

Processing and Properties of Advanced Ceramics and Composites III: Ceramic Transactions, Volume 225

Related Events

8th Annual Battery Safety

13th Annual Lithium Battery Materials & Chemistries

Electric & Hybrid Vehicle Technology Expo & Conference

SEMICON Japan 2017

Related Directories

Advanced Material Technologies

Panadyne Inc.

Ortech Inc.

Panadyne Inc.

You must login or register in order to post a comment.

Report Abusive Comment

Subscribe For Free!
  • Print & Digital Edition Subscriptions
  • eNewsletters
  • Online Registration
  • Customer Service

More Videos

CI directories

Products

Handbook of Advanced Ceramics Machining

Handbook of Advanced Ceramics Machining

Ceramics, with their unique properties and diverse applications, hold the potential to revolutionize many industries, including automotive and semiconductors.

See More Products

CI raw and manufactured materials

Ceramic Industry Magazine

CI September 2017 Cover

2017 September

Find out which companies are the leading manufacturers of advanced ceramics, glasses and refractories in the 2017 CI Top 14!
View More Subscribe
  • Resources
    • Advertiser Index
    • List Rental
    • Custom Content & Marketing Services
    • Manufacturing Group
    • Partners
    • Want More?
    • Connect
    • Privacy Policy

Copyright ©2017. All Rights Reserved BNP Media.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing