Yang
Zhang
a,
Yanhan
Jin
a,
Jinglan
Liu
a,
Qiancheng
Ren
a,
Zhengyang
Chen
b,
Yi
Zhao
b and
Pei
Zhao
*ac
aCenter for X-Mechanics and Institute of Applied Mechanics, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, P. R. China. E-mail: peizhao@zju.edu.cn
bCollege of Information Science and Electronic Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, P. R. China
cState Key Laboratory of Fluid Power and Mechatronic Systems, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310027, P. R. China
First published on 12th October 2022
Graphene with a large tensile strain is a promising candidate for the new “straintronics'’ applications. The current approaches of strain engineering on graphene are mainly realized by flexible or hollow substrates. In this work, a novel method for strained graphene on a rigid substrate assisted by PDMS stretching and interface adjustments is proposed. The Raman spectra show that the maximum strain of graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate is ∼1.5%, and multiple characterizations demonstrate its high cleanness, flatness, integrity, and reliable electrical performance. The successful strain engineering is attributed to the protection of a layer of formvar resin and the interfacial capillary force of the buffering liquid. We believe this technique can advance strain-related fundamental studies and applications of two-dimensional materials.
Current approaches for strain engineering in graphene are mainly realized using a special substrate in combination with an applied force that maintains the generated strain. For instance, graphene clamped on a hole can be strained biaxially using an atomic force microscopy (AFM) tip or creating a pressure difference on the two sides of graphene,12,13 and the uniaxial strain can be induced by bending or stretching a flexible substrate.14–16 Through these approaches, many fundamental physical properties of graphene have been discovered by studying its optical phonons via Raman spectroscopy.17,18 However, for use in the state-of-the-art framework of field-effect transistors (FETs), they are usually fabricated on the surface of silicon or its oxide, and thus the strained graphene mentioned above is not compatible with the objectives of graphene strain engineering for better electrical performances. Therefore, it is of high significance to develop strain engineering and maintenance techniques for graphene on rigid substrates, especially on the surface of silicon oxide, but thus far no relevant explorations have been reported.
In this work, we develop a facile and robust technique for the strain engineering of monolayer graphene on a rigid substrate of SiO2/Si via a wet-transfer method. This technique includes three steps: graphene staining on a flexible substrate, graphene printing onto the target rigid substrate, and removal of the polymer protective layer from the graphene surface. Multiple characterizations demonstrate that the strained graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate not only has a stable strain state with a relatively high value of 1.5% but also possesses high cleanness and flatness with few wrinkles. Moreover, the fabricated FETs demonstrate reliable electrical performances, although an opened energy bandgap is not observed. We believe this strain engineering technique of atomic-layer-thick materials can pave the way for the development of “straintronics” and related fields of not only graphene but also other 2D materials.
To characterize the quality of the strained graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate, multiple techniques were employed, as shown in Fig. 2. The graphene was synthesized as a single crystal using the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method.20 The optical microscopy (OM) image in Fig. 2a shows that the strained graphene has high cleanness and flatness without any visible contaminations or wrinkles on its surface. The distinct hexagonal edges indicated by the black dotted lines demonstrate the high integrity of the graphene. The crack in the graphene is probably introduced by the peeling off of the PDMS layer considering that cracks can release the strain in graphene unless the graphene has already been in touch with the rigid substrate and its strain has already been fixed.21 The scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image in Fig. 2b proves that there were no obvious polymer residues on the graphene surface. Fig. 2c shows the atomic force microscopy (AFM) image of graphene within a 10 × 10 μm2 area and its height profile indicates that the maximum height variation in the graphene surface is about 2 nm, which is only about 16% of that for graphene transferred by polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) (Fig. S3†). All the above results demonstrate that the strained graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate has high cleanness, flatness, and integrity, which are important for both fundamental research and the applications of graphene strain engineering.
In order to evaluate the electronic and phonon structure changes as well as the quality of the strained graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate, non-destructive Raman spectroscopy was used. Fig. 2d shows the scanning Raman map of the 2D peak positions for strained graphene and the representative Raman spectra indicated by the coloured circles are shown in Fig. 2e. The scanning map was executed in a 100 × 100 μm2 area with a spatial resolution of 1 μm. To further characterize the quality of the strained graphene on the SiO2 substrate, we performed the scanned Raman spectra with an x-axis scale as shown in Fig. S4.† The results show that the intensity of the D peak (at about 1350 cm−1) representing defects is relatively low in the area away from the crack, confirming the high quality of the transferred graphene. As can been seen from the scanning Raman map, the graphene in the red region has a G peak (at about 1580 cm−1) and 2D peak (at about 2800 cm−1) that are close to the positions of transferred CVD graphene without any strain.22 However, for graphene in the regions indicated by other colours, the Raman peaks are shifted to lower wavenumbers. Particularly, for graphene in the blue region, its G and 2D peaks have each split into two subpeaks denoted by G−, G+, 2D− and 2D+, which results from the inconsistency of strain in the graphene along and perpendicular to the tensile direction.23 The G peak of graphene arises from the doubly degenerate E2g phonon mode at the Brillouin-zone centre and its split is caused by the loss of the six-fold and three-fold rotational symmetries of graphene under a uniaxial strain;16,23 the 2D peak redshifts under the synergy of the Dirac cone shifting and the anisotropic phonon softening at the same time.15,24 Note that the slightly larger strain values at the graphene edge are caused by a smoothing error from the Raman software, as shown in Fig. S5.† While Raman peak splitting for graphene strained by flexible substrates is commonly seen,25,26 this is the first time this splitting phenomenon has been observed on a rigid substrate.
The shift and splitting of the Raman peaks suggest that tensile uniaxial strains were successfully generated in graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate via the above procedures according to the well-established relation between graphene strain and its Raman peak:16
(1) |
We then characterized the electrical behaviors of strained graphene on SiO2/Si substrate by fabricating the back-gate graphene FETs as shown in Fig. 3a. For comparison, devices using unstretched graphene transferred by the same procedure without strain was also prepared, in both a 60 nm-thick nickel layer was evaporated on two sides of graphene as the source/drain electrodes. The transfer characteristic curves are shown in Fig. 3b, with Ids plotted as a function of Vgs at a fixed Vds. Both devices exhibit typical bipolar characteristic curves, indicating that the external electric field has made the type of carriers converted.25 However, with a maximum uniaxial strain of 1.4% in graphene, its energy bandgap has still not been opened. This is consistent with the prediction in other literatures that the strain threshold in graphene to open the energy bandgap is considerably large.26 In addition, the VDirac of FET fabricated by strained graphene is slightly left-shifted compared to that fabricated by graphene without strain, which in agreement with the result of strained graphene on flexible substrates.27,28
By decreasing Vgs from 0 to −20 V in a 5 V step, we further analyzed the output characteristic of graphene FETs with and without strain. As shown in Fig. 3c and d , the straight lines indicate good ohmic contact between electrodes and graphene. At the same Vds, the Ids measured from strained graphene FET is smaller than that of graphene without strain, implying that strain engineering causes a higher electrical resistance to graphene. This can be attributed to the symmetry break of graphene lattices under a uniaxial strain, which leads to a deformation of the electronic band structure and a change of the carrier concentration.25 Additionally, the low Ids at this condition proved that these devices have a small leakage current (Fig. S8†), which also demonstrates that the strained graphene on SiO2/Si substrate acquired by this method has a reliable electrical performance.
Finally, we discuss the key factors involved in this technique as shown in Fig. 4a. During the stretching process, the tensile graphene has undergone the asymmetric changes of lattices as mentioned above, which may dramatically reduce its high intrinsic fracture strength.29 When graphene was directly printed to the target substrate from the flexible stretching substrate, the effect of stress unloading can cause serious cracks to graphene under this asymmetric change. Therefore, a successful transfer printing requires a sufficient supporting strength to graphene to prevent the stress unloading.
As shown in the previous literature, formvar resin as a protective layer can supply graphene with an effective support during the transfer process.30 As shown by the comparative experimental result without formvar in Fig. 4b, the obtained graphene on the SiO2/Si substrate is destroyed disastrously. Fig. 4c shows the transfer printing result without a buffering liquid on target substrate. Obviously, only a small part of original graphene was left on the SiO2/Si substrate. It suggests that the buffering liquid dropped on the target substrate has a downwards capillary force to pull graphene/formvar stack to the target substrate, similar to our and other previous reported literatures.31,32 Therefore, it is reasonable to infer that the physical properties of the buffering liquid will strongly affect the preservation of graphene strain during the transfer printing process.
As can been seen from Fig. 4d, compared with heptane and ethanol as buffer liquids, DI water provides the graphene with the largest and most uniform values of strain. Several trials were performed and the results are summarized in Fig. 4e. The histogram shows that the maximum strain of graphene using DI water is about 1.5%, while those using ethanol and heptane are only approximately 0.5% and 0.25%, respectively, indicating that the use of DI water as the buffering liquid is robust and encouraging. We attribute this to the fact that the DI water, with a large contact angle on the graphene surface, can effectively fill the gap between the graphene and the adjacent interfaces of formvar and SiO2/Si substrate, as illustrated in Fig. 4a.35
Additionally, the reason that graphene does not relax after being transferred onto the SiO2/Si substrate is the ultra-strong adhesion between graphene and the substrate, as well as the ‘downwards capillary force’ supplied by the buffering liquid. As demonstrated by previous works, the adhesion energy between graphene and the SiO2 surface is as strong as 0.45 ± 0.02 J m−2, which is reasonable for maintaining a 1.5% strain in graphene, considering that 2.5% and 3% strain values can be maintained by PDMS and epoxy with adhesion energies of only 0.4 and 0.42 J m−2, respectively.13,24,34,36,37 Furthermore, the buffering liquid on the SiO2/Si substrate supplies a downwards capillary force to further increase the adhesion energy between graphene and the SiO2/Si substrate, as demonstrated by the results in Fig. 4c and in previously published work.33,34,38 Theoretically, this can be extended to other 2D materials such as hBN and MoS2 and is also compatible with the strain engineering of 2D heterojunctions.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2na00580h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |