Could Graphene Replace Semiconductors?

September 8, 2008 By Miranda Marquit

(PhysOrg.com) -- “People want a faster computer chip,” Philip Kim tells PhysOrg.com. “And it needs to be smaller. But in order to increase the speed of the chip, or to get it smaller, we are approaching a point where you need materials other than silicon.”

Kim, professor at Columbia University, believes that graphene may be just that material. Along with his colleagues, Bolotin, Sikes, Hone and Stormer, Kim thinks that suspended graphene may provide the transport capability needed to reach greater speeds in computer ships. The work of the group from Columbia University can be found in Physical Review Letters: “Temperature-Dependent Transport in Suspended Graphene.”

When one looks at the structure of graphite, stacked layers of pure carbon are apparent. However, it wasn’t until 2004 that a process sophisticated enough to “slice” off one of the layers was discovered. This single layer is called graphene. Graphene is basically a sheet of bonded carbon atoms, with the thickness of only one atom. If one could look down at graphene from the top, one would observe that the sheet bears a strong resemblance to honeycomb, with its hexagons fitted snugly together.

“Graphene behaves almost like semiconductor but without a energy gap,” Kim explains. This is why it would do well as a material for computer chips. “When you apply an electric field perpendicular to graphene, the number of electrons – the carrier density – can be tuned.”

“One of the main themes is how fast the charge can move in graphene,” Kim continues. “Higher mobility means electron conducts faster in the system. It has always been speculated that the mobility of graphene can be quite high. But it has not been shown as high as some of the highest semiconductors in the past.”

The group at Columbia University, however, has shown that graphene can exceed the transport speed of even the semiconductors with the highest mobility. They have done this by suspending the graphene at room temperature. “We have found that this transport ability is higher in the graphene than in any known semiconductor at room temperature.”

“Lower mobility in graphene comes from external impurities, rather than intrinsic limitations,” Kim explains. “So the question becomes how to remove these impurities. Many of the impurities actually come from the substrate; this is the substance the graphene is sitting on. Suspending the graphene and subsequently annealing it would help ‘clean’ the graphene, and increase the mobility.”

The current work also shows that temperature plays a role in the transport ability of graphene. “We found that the graphene has the highest mobility at room temperature,” Kim says. “This is great, since various applications would get more use out of something that can work in the real world.”

And the future? Kim believes that there are still impurities in the graphene. “There are still limits right now,” he says. “I think we can bring the mobility even higher.”

Kim maintains that this discovery of temperature-dependent transport in graphene goes beyond practical application. “Every time you discover something like this – where mobility is really enhanced – it results in a discovery of new physics. I think the same thing will happen with graphene. Improving mobility will allow us to look at new physics in a very exotic system.”

Copyright 2007 PhysOrg.com.
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  • fengping - Sep 08, 2008
    • Rank: 3.7 / 5 (3)
    People always say they have found some material "can" or "could" replace silicon or will be the following material after silicon in microelectronics. But what I really concern is how to make a real -integrated- device by using your material.

    Take carbon nanotube and graphene as examples, how can you integrated these materials into chips?
    How can you make billions of devices with similar properties as man have done in Si electronics?
    How to arrange them and how to make contact to them?

    Since the discovery of carbon nanotubes, too many scientists investigate them and say they have great potential in electronics, but these scietists have not make a real important commercial devices from carbon nanotubes after nearly 17 years investigation.

    Maybe similar things will hapen on graphene.

    I think the researches on carbon nanotube and graphene are not real important as the researcheres have said. There are not real new important physics and real practical applications.
  • ZeroDelta - Sep 08, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (4)
    The "low hanging fruit" (Si semi-conductors) is always easiest to achieve. Sure you can't use the familiar lithography techniques on graphene for manufacturing. So what. Lets move into the undiscovered country already.
  • Arikin - Sep 08, 2008
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Graphene is still difficult to even produce in large quantities or sizes. Maybe the process used to create it can be redone to produce the patterns needed.

    Idea: Try arranging the substrate into the desired pattern and then grow the graphene on top. Then as this article points out you will need to remove the substrate or start with a substrate that doesn't interfere.

September 8, 2008 all stories

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