
Electrons can travel over 100 times faster in graphene than in silicon
Date: Monday, March 24, 2008 @ 23:27:59 UTC Topic: Science
University of Maryland physicists have shown that in graphene the
intrinsic limit to the mobility, a measure of how well a material
conducts electricity, is higher than any other known material at room
temperature. Graphene, a single-atom-thick sheet of graphite, is a new
material which combines aspects of semiconductors and metals.
Their results, published online in the journal Nature Nanotechnology,
indicate that graphene holds great promise for replacing conventional
semiconductor materials such as silicon in applications ranging from
high-speed computer chips to biochemical sensors.
A team of researchers led by
physics professor Michael S. Fuhrer of the university's Center for
Nanophysics and Advanced Materials, and the Maryland NanoCenter said
the findings are the first measurement of the effect of thermal
vibrations on the conduction of electrons in graphene, and show that
thermal vibrations have an extraordinarily small effect on the
electrons in graphene.
In any material, the energy associated with the temperature of the
material causes the atoms of the material to vibrate in place. As
electrons travel through the material, they can bounce off these
vibrating atoms, giving rise to electrical resistance. This electrical
resistance is "intrinsic" to the material: it cannot be eliminated
unless the material is cooled to absolute zero temperature, and hence
sets the upper limit to how well a material can conduct electricity.
In graphene, the vibrating atoms at room temperature produce a
resistivity of about 1.0 microOhm-cm (resistivity is a specific measure
of resistance; the resistance of a piece material is its resistivity
times its length and divided by its cross-sectional area). This is
about 35 percent less than the resistivity of copper, the lowest
resistivity material known at room temperature.
"Other extrinsic sources in today's fairly dirty graphene samples
add some extra resistivity to graphene," explained Fuhrer, "so the
overall resistivity isn't quite as low as copper's at room temperature
yet. However, graphene has far fewer electrons than copper, so in
graphene the electrical current is carried by only a few electrons
moving much faster than the electrons in copper."
In semiconductors, a different
measure, mobility, is used to quantify how fast electrons move. The
limit to mobility of electrons in graphene is set by thermal vibration
of the atoms and is about 200,000 cm2/Vs at room temperature, compared to about 1,400 cm2/Vs in silicon, and 77,000 cm2/Vs in indium antimonide, the highest mobility conventional semiconductor known.
"Interestingly, in semiconducting carbon nanotubes, which may be
thought of as graphene rolled into a cylinder, we've shown that the
mobility at room temperature is over 100,000 cm2/Vs" said Fuhrer (T. Dürkop, S. A. Getty, Enrique Cobas, and M. S. Fuhrer, Nano Letters 4, 35 (2004)).
Mobility determines the speed at which an electronic device (for
instance, a field-effect transistor, which forms the basis of modern
computer chips) can turn on and off. The very high mobility makes
graphene promising for applications in which transistors much switch
extremely fast, such as in processing extremely high frequency signals.
Mobility can also be expressed as the conductivity of a material
per electronic charge carrier, and so high mobility is also
advantageous for chemical or bio-chemical sensing applications in which
a charge signal from, for instance, a molecule adsorbed on the device,
is translated into an electrical signal by changing the conductivity of
the device.
Graphene is therefore a very promising material for chemical and
bio-chemical sensing applications. The low resitivity and extremely
thin nature of graphene also promises applications in thin,
mechanically tough, electrically conducting, transparent films. Such
films are sorely needed in a variety of electronics applications from
touch screens to photovoltaic cells.
Fuhrer and co-workers showed that although the room temperature limit of mobility in graphene is as high as 200,000 cm2/Vs, in present-day samples the actual mobility is lower, around 10,000 cm2/Vs,
leaving significant room for improvement. Because graphene is only one
atom thick, current samples must sit on a substrate, in this case
silicon dioxide.
Trapped electrical charges in the silicon dioxide (a sort of
atomic-scale dirt) can affect the electrons in graphene and reduce the
mobility. Also, vibrations of the silicon dioxide atoms themselves can
also have an effect on the graphene which is stronger than the effect
of graphene’s own atomic vibrations. This so-called “remote interfacial
phonon scattering” effect is only a small correction to the mobility in
a silicon transistor, but because the phonons in graphene itself are so
ineffective at scattering electrons, this effect becomes very important
in graphene.
“We believe that this work points out the importance of these
extrinsic effects, and creates a roadmap for finding better substrates
for future graphene devices in order to reduce the effects of charged
impurity scattering and remote interfacial phonon scattering.” Fuhrer
said.
Source: University of Maryland Via: http://www.physorg.com/news125574730.html
-------------- In other physics news:
Greatest experiment ever in particle physics nears countdown
In a vast circular underground tunnel below the French-Swiss border,
the final pieces of a gigantic machine are being set in place for an
extraordinary investigation into the infinitely small at CERN: Europe's
atom-smashing laboratory.
Full story: http://www.physorg.com/news125561900.html
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