Method for Transferring High-Mobility CVD-Grown Graphene with Perfluoropolymers
ORAL
Abstract
The transfer of graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) using amorphous polymers represents a widely implemented method for graphene-based electronic device fabrication. However, the most commonly used polymer, poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), leaves a residue on the graphene that limits the mobility. Here we report a method for graphene transfer and patterning that employs a perfluoropolymer --- Hyflon --- as a transfer handle and to protect the graphene against contamination from photoresists or other polymers. CVD-grown graphene transferred this way onto LaAlO$_3$/SrTiO$_3$ heterostructures is atomically clean, with high mobility (˜30,000 cm$^2$V$^{−1}$s$^{−1}$) near the Dirac point at 2 K and clear, quantized Hall and magnetoresistance. Local control of the LaAlO$_3$/SrTiO$_3$ interfacial metal-insulator transition --- through the graphene --- is preserved with this transfer method. The use of perfluoropolymers, such as Hyflon, with CVD-grown graphene and other 2D materials can readily be implemented with other polymers or photoresists.
–
Authors
-
Jianan Li
University of Pittsburgh
-
Jen-Feng Hsu
University of Pittsburgh
-
H. Lee
University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison
-
Shivendra Tripathi
University of Pittsburgh
-
Qing Guo
University of Pittsburgh, Univ of Pittsburgh
-
Lu Chen
University of Pittsburgh
-
M. Huang
University of Pittsburgh
-
Shonali Dhingra
University of Pittsburgh
-
Jung-Woo Lee
University of Wisconsin-Madison
-
Chang-Beom Eom
University of Wisconsin-Madison, UW Madison
-
Patrick Irvin
University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Quantum Institute
-
Jeremy Levy
University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Quantum Institute
-
Brian D'Urso
University of Pittsburgh