Manipulating Nanoribbons at the Molecular Level

Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley team engineers the shape and properties of nanoscale strips of graphene.

Written byLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Narrow strips of graphene called nanoribbons exhibit extraordinary properties that make them important candidates for future nanoelectronic technologies. A barrier to exploiting them, however, is the difficulty of controlling their shape at the atomic scale, a prerequisite for many possible applications.

Now, researchers at the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California, Berkeley, have developed a new precision approach for synthesizing graphene nanoribbons from pre-designed molecular building blocks. Using this process the researchers have built nanoribbons that have enhanced properties—such as position-dependent, tunable bandgaps—that are potentially very useful for next-generation electronic circuitry.

The results appear in a paper titled “Molecular bandgap engineering of bottom-up synthesized graphene nanoribbon heterojunctions,” published in Nature Nanotechnology.

“This work represents progress towards the goal of controllably assembling molecules into whatever shapes we want,” says Mike Crommie, senior scientist at Berkeley Lab, professor at UC Berkeley, affiliated with the Kavli Energy NanoScience Institute, and a leader of the study. “For the first time we have created a molecular nanoribbon where the width changes exactly how we designed it to.”

Nanoribbons past and present 

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