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Atomic Structure of Epitaxial Graphene Sidewall Nanoribbons: Flat Graphene, Miniribbons, and the Confinement Gap
Author(s) -
Irene Palacio,
Arlensiú Celis,
Maya Narayanan Nair,
Alexandre Gloter,
Alberto Zobelli,
Muriel Sicot,
D. Malterre,
M. S. Nevius,
Walt A. de Heer,
Claire Berger,
E. H. Conrad,
A. TalebIbrahimi,
Antonio Tejeda
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/nl503352v
Subject(s) - graphene nanoribbons , graphene , scanning tunneling microscope , materials science , ribbon , condensed matter physics , band gap , nanotechnology , angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy , optoelectronics , electronic structure , physics , composite material
Graphene nanoribbons grown on sidewall facets of SiC have demonstrated exceptional quantized ballistic transport up to 15 μm at room temperature. Angular-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has shown that the ribbons have the band structure of charge neutral graphene, while bent regions of the ribbon develop a bandgap. We present scanning tunneling microscopy and transmission electron microscopy of armchair nanoribbons grown on recrystallized sidewall trenches etched in SiC. We show that the nanoribbons consist of a single graphene layer essentially decoupled from the facet surface. The nanoribbons are bordered by 1-2 nm wide bent miniribbons at both the top and bottom edges of the nanoribbons. We establish that nanoscale confinement in the graphene miniribbons is the origin of the local large band gap observed in ARPES. The structural results presented here show how this gap is formed and provide a framework to help understand ballistic transport in sidewall graphene.

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