Issue 3, 2024

Tailoring giant quantum transport anisotropy in nanoporous graphenes under electrostatic disorder

Abstract

During the last 15 years bottom-up on-surface synthesis has been demonstrated as an efficient way to synthesize carbon nanostructures with atomic precision, opening the door to unprecedented electronic control at the nanoscale. Nanoporous graphenes (NPGs) fabricated as two-dimensional arrays of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) represent one of the key recent breakthroughs in the field. NPGs interestingly display in-plane transport anisotropy of charge carriers, and such anisotropy was shown to be tunable by modulating quantum interference. Herein, using large-scale quantum transport simulations, we show that electrical anisotropy in NPGs is not only resilient to disorder but can further be massively enhanced by its presence. This outcome paves the way to systematic engineering of quantum transport in NPGs as a novel concept for efficient quantum devices and architectures.

Graphical abstract: Tailoring giant quantum transport anisotropy in nanoporous graphenes under electrostatic disorder

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
21 Sep 2023
Accepted
18 Jan 2024
First published
23 Jan 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Horiz., 2024,9, 407-415

Tailoring giant quantum transport anisotropy in nanoporous graphenes under electrostatic disorder

I. Alcón, A. W. Cummings and S. Roche, Nanoscale Horiz., 2024, 9, 407 DOI: 10.1039/D3NH00416C

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