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Published April 25, 2010 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopic Studies of the Effects of Dielectrics and Metallic Substrates on the Local Electronic Characteristics of Graphene

Abstract

Atomically resolved imaging and spectroscopic characteristics of graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on copper foils are investigated and compared with those of mechanical exfoliated graphene on SiO_2. For exfoliated graphene, the local spectral deviations from ideal behavior may be attributed to strain induced by the SiO_2 substrate. For CVD grown graphene, the lattice structure appears strongly distorted by the underlying copper, with regions in direct contact with copper showing nearly square lattices whereas suspended regions from thermal relaxation exhibiting nearly honeycomb or hexagonal lattice structures. The electronic density of states (DOS) correlates closely with the atomic arrangements of carbon, showing excess zero-bias tunneling conductance and nearly energy-independent DOS for strongly distorted graphene, in contrast to the linearly dispersive DOS for suspended graphene. These results suggest that graphene can interact strongly with both metallic and dielectric materials in close proximity, leading to non-negligible modifications to the electronic properties.

Additional Information

© 2010 ECS - The Electrochemical Society. The work at Caltech was jointly supported by the National Science Foundation and the Nano Research Initiatives (NRI) under the Center of Science and Engineering of Materials (CSEM). C.N.L. and J.V. acknowledge the support by NSF CAREER DMR/0748910, UC Lab Fees 09-LR-06-117702-BASD, and ONR N00014-09-1-0724.

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August 19, 2023
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