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Graphene nanopattern as a universal epitaxy platform for single-crystal membrane production and defect reductionoa mark
  • Kim, Hyunseok ;
  • Lee, Sangho ;
  • Shin, Jiho ;
  • Zhu, Menglin ;
  • Akl, Marx ;
  • Lu, Kuangye ;
  • Han, Ne Myo ;
  • Baek, Yongmin ;
  • Chang, Celesta S. ;
  • Suh, Jun Min ;
  • Kim, Ki Seok ;
  • Park, Bo In ;
  • Zhang, Yanming ;
  • Choi, Chanyeol ;
  • Shin, Heechang ;
  • Yu, He ;
  • Meng, Yuan ;
  • Kim, Seung Il ;
  • Seo, Seungju ;
  • Lee, Kyusang ;
  • Kum, Hyun S. ;
  • Lee, Jae Hyun ;
  • Ahn, Jong Hyun ;
  • Bae, Sang Hoon ;
  • Hwang, Jinwoo ;
  • Shi, Yunfeng ;
  • Kim, Jeehwan
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Publication Year
2022-10-01
Publisher
Nature Research
Citation
Nature Nanotechnology, Vol.17, pp.1054-1059
Mesh Keyword
Active device layersDefect reductionFunctional systemsHeterogeneous integrationLattice polarityMembrane productionNano patternPlatform systemsProduction reductionSingle-crystal materials
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
BioengineeringAtomic and Molecular Physics, and OpticsBiomedical EngineeringMaterials Science (all)Condensed Matter PhysicsElectrical and Electronic Engineering
Abstract
Heterogeneous integration of single-crystal materials offers great opportunities for advanced device platforms and functional systems1. Although substantial efforts have been made to co-integrate active device layers by heteroepitaxy, the mismatch in lattice polarity and lattice constants has been limiting the quality of the grown materials2. Layer transfer methods as an alternative approach, on the other hand, suffer from the limited availability of transferrable materials and transfer-process-related obstacles3. Here, we introduce graphene nanopatterns as an advanced heterointegration platform that allows the creation of a broad spectrum of freestanding single-crystalline membranes with substantially reduced defects, ranging from non-polar materials to polar materials and from low-bandgap to high-bandgap semiconductors. Additionally, we unveil unique mechanisms to substantially reduce crystallographic defects such as misfit dislocations, threading dislocations and antiphase boundaries in lattice- and polarity-mismatched heteroepitaxial systems, owing to the flexibility and chemical inertness of graphene nanopatterns. More importantly, we develop a comprehensive mechanics theory to precisely guide cracks through the graphene layer, and demonstrate the successful exfoliation of any epitaxial overlayers grown on the graphene nanopatterns. Thus, this approach has the potential to revolutionize the heterogeneous integration of dissimilar materials by widening the choice of materials and offering flexibility in designing heterointegrated systems.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32946
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-022-01200-6
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
The team at MIT acknowledges support by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Young Faculty Award (award no. 029584-00001), the Air Force Research Laboratory (award no. FA9453-18-2-0017 and FA9453-21-C-0717), the US Department of Energy\u2019s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) under the Solar Energy Technologies Office (award no. DE-EE0008558), Universiti Tenaga Nasional and UNTEN R&D Sdn. Bhd., Malaysia through TNB Seed fund grant no. U-TV-RD-20-10, and Umicore. STEM was performed at the Center for Electron Microscopy and Analysis (CEMAS) at The Ohio State University. M.Z. and J.H. acknowledge support by the National Science Foundation under NSF award no. DMR-2011876.
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