Login / Signup

Transient Carrier Cooling Enhanced by Grain Boundaries in Graphene Monolayer.

Hee Jun ShinJaesu KimSeongho KimHyeongmun KimVan Luan NguyenYoung Hee LeeSeong Chu LimJoo-Hiuk Son
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Using a high terahertz (THz) electric field (ETHz), the carrier scattering in graphene was studied with an electric field of up to 282 kV/cm. When the grain size of graphene monolayers varies from small (5 μm) and medium (70 μm) to large grains (500 μm), the dominant carrier scattering source in large- and small-grained graphene differs at high THz field, i.e., there is optical phonon scattering for large grains and defect scattering for small grains. Although the electron-optical phonon coupling strength is the same for all grain sizes in our study, the enhanced optical phonon scattering in the high THz field from the large-grained graphene is caused by a higher optical phonon temperature, originating from the slow relaxation of accelerated electrons. Unlike the large-grained graphene, lower electron and optical phonon temperatures are found in the small-grained graphene monolayer, resulting from the effective carrier cooling through the defects, called supercollisions. Our results indicate that the carrier mobility in the high-crystalline graphene is easily vulnerable to scattering by the optical phonons. Thus, controlling the population of defect sites, as a means for carrier cooling, can enhance the carrier mobility at high electric fields in graphene electronics by suppressing the heating of optical phonons.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • high resolution
  • carbon nanotubes
  • high speed
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • molecular dynamics
  • magnetic resonance
  • computed tomography
  • ionic liquid
  • blood brain barrier
  • solar cells