Abstract
The use of graphene for applications such as micro- and nano-scale electronic devices
often involves incorporating the two-dimensional material onto various substrates.
However, the effects of the substrate's mechanical properties on electrical contact
conductance are not fully understood. Here, we explore these effects by measuring
the conductance between a nanoscale probe and a single layer of graphene with three
different levels of substrate support: no substrate, i.e. free-standing graphene,
an elastic substrate, and a rigid substrate. These three systems are studied using
conductive atomic force microscopy experiments complemented by molecular dynamics
simulations using the electrochemical dynamics with implicit degrees of freedom method.
In both experiments and simulations, at a given normal force, current increases as:
rigid substrate < elastic substrate < no substrate. We demonstrate that the
substrate support influences graphene/tip contact conductance through substrate's
elasticity, which determines contact size, as well as through variability of interatomic
distances in the contact, which contributes to the interface resistivity.
X. Hu, J.Lee, D. Berman*, A. Martini: “Substrate Effect on the Electrical Conductance at a Nanoasperity-Graphene Contact”, Carbon 137, 118-124 (2018).