Germanene

Summary

Germanene is a material made up of a single layer of germanium atoms.[2] The material is created in a process similar to that of silicene and graphene, in which high vacuum and high temperature are used to deposit a layer of germanium atoms on a substrate.[2][3][4] High-quality thin films of germanene have revealed unusual two-dimensional structures with novel electronic properties suitable for semiconductor device applications and materials science research.

(a) STM image of germanene. (b) Profile (black line in (a)) showing step heights of ~3.2  Å. (c) High-resolution STM image (distorted by sample drift). (d) Profiles along the white continuous and dashed lines in (c) showing a ~9–10  Å separation between protrusions having heights of ~0.2  Å. (e) Electron diffraction pattern. (f) Model of germanene on Au(111).[1]

Preparation and structure edit

In September 2014, G. Le Lay and others reported the deposition of a single atom thickness, ordered and two-dimensional multi-phase film by molecular beam epitaxy upon a gold surface in a crystal lattice with Miller indices (111). The structure was confirmed with scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) revealing a nearly flat honeycomb structure.[5]

We have provided compelling evidence of the birth of nearly flat germanene—a novel, synthetic germanium allotrope which does not exist in nature. It is a new cousin of graphene.

— Guy Le Lay from Aix-Marseille University, New Journal of Physics

Additional confirmation was obtained by spectroscopic measurement and density functional theory calculations. The development of high quality and nearly flat single atom films created speculation that germanene may replace graphene if not merely add an alternative to the novel properties of related nanomaterials.[2][5][6][7][8][9]

Bampoulis and others[10] have reported the formation of germanene on the outermost layer of Ge2Pt nanocrystals. Atomically resolved STM images of germanene on Ge2Pt nanocrystals reveal a buckled honeycomb structure. This honeycomb lattice is composed of two hexagonal sublattices displaced by 0.2 Å in the vertical direction with respect to each other. The nearest-neighbor distance was found to be 2.5±0.1 Å, in close agreement with the Ge-Ge distance in germanene.

Based on STM observations and density functional theory calculations, formation of an apparently more distorted form of germanene has been reported on platinum.[5][11] Epitaxial growth of germanene crystals on GaAs(0001) has also been demonstrated, and calculations suggest that the minimal interactions should allow germanene to be readily removed from this substrate.[12]

Germanene's structure is described as "a group-IV graphene-like two-dimensional buckled nanosheet".[13] Adsorption of additional germanium onto the graphene-like sheet leads to formation of "dumbbell" units, each with two out-of-plane atoms of germanium, one on either side of the plane. Dumbbells attract each other. Periodically repeating arrangements of dumbbell structures may lead to additional stable phases of germanene, with altered electronic and magnetic properties.[14]

In October 2018, Junji Yuhara and others reported that germanene is easily prepared by a segregation method, using a bare Ag thin film on a Ge substrate and achieved in situ its epitaxial growth.[15] The growth of germanene, akin to graphene and silicene, by a segregation method, is considered to be technically very important for the easy synthesis and transfer of this highly promising 2D electronic material.

Properties edit

Germanene's electronic and optical properties have been determined from ab initio calculations,[16] and structural and electronic properties from first principles.[17][18] These properties make the material suitable for use in the channel of a high-performance field-effect transistor[19] and have generated discussion regarding the use of elemental monolayers in other electronic devices.[20] The electronic properties of germanene are unusual, and provide a rare opportunity to test the properties of Dirac fermions.[21][22] Germanene has no band gap, but attaching a hydrogen atom to each germanium atom creates one.[23] These unusual properties are generally shared by graphene, silicene, germanene, stanene, and plumbene.[22][24][25][26]

References edit

  1. ^ Dávila, María Eugenia; Le Lay, Guy (2016). "Few layer epitaxial germanene: A novel two-dimensional Dirac material". Scientific Reports. 6: 20714. Bibcode:2016NatSR...620714D. doi:10.1038/srep20714. PMC 4748270. PMID 26860590.
  2. ^ a b c "Graphene gets a 'cousin' in the shape of germanene". Phys.org. Institute of Physics. 10 September 2014.
  3. ^ Derivaz, Mickael and Dentel, Didier and Stephan, Regis and Hanf, Marie-Christine and Mehdaoui, Ahmed and Sonnet, Philippe and Pirri, Carmelo (2015). "Continuous germanene layer on Al (111)". Nano Letters. 15 (4). ACS Publications: 2510–2516. Bibcode:2015NanoL..15.2510D. doi:10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00085. PMID 25802988.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Li, Linfei; Shuang-zan Lu; Jinbo Pan; Zhihui Qin; Yu-qi Wang; Yeliang Wang; Geng-yu Cao; Shixuan Du; Hong-Jun Gao (2014). "Buckled Germanene Formation on Pt(111)". Advanced Materials. 26 (28): 4820–4824. Bibcode:2014AdM....26.4820L. doi:10.1002/adma.201400909. PMID 24841358. S2CID 1951633.
  5. ^ a b c Dávila, M. E. (2014). "Germanene: a novel two-dimensional germanium allotrope akin to graphene and silicene". New Journal of Physics. 16 (9): 095002. arXiv:1406.2488. Bibcode:2014NJPh...16i5002D. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/16/9/095002. S2CID 53453703.
  6. ^ Clifford, Jonathan (10 September 2014). "Aix-Marseille University Researchers Produce Germanium Allotrope Germanene". Uncover California Online Media. Archived from the original on 17 February 2020. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  7. ^ "Gold Substrate Used To Synthesize Graphene's Cousin Germanene". Capital OTC. 10 September 2014. Archived from the original on 11 September 2014. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  8. ^ Spickernell, Sarah (10 September 2014). "Germanene: Have scientists just created the new graphene?". City A.M.
  9. ^ Leathers, Jason (10 September 2014). "New Member In The Family 'Germanene'". Capital Wired. Archived from the original on 3 June 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  10. ^ Bampoulis, P.; Zhang, L.; Safaei, A.; van Gastel, R.; Poelsema, B.; Zandvliet, H. J. W. (2014). "Germanene termination of Ge2Pt crystals on Ge(110)". Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter. 26 (44): 442001. arXiv:1706.00697. Bibcode:2014JPCM...26R2001B. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/26/44/442001. PMID 25210978. S2CID 36478002.
  11. ^ Li, Linfei; Shuang-zan Lu; Jinbo Pan; Zhihui Qin; Yu-qi Wang; Yeliang Wang; Geng-yu Cao; Shixuan Du; Hong-Jun Gao (2014). "Buckled Germanene Formation on Pt(111)". Advanced Materials. 26 (28): 4820–4824. Bibcode:2014AdM....26.4820L. doi:10.1002/adma.201400909. PMID 24841358. S2CID 1951633.
  12. ^ Kaloni, T. P.; Schwingenschlögl, U. (13 November 2013). "Weak interaction between germanene and GaAs(0001) by H intercalation: A route to exfoliation". Journal of Applied Physics. 114 (18): 184307–184307–4. arXiv:1310.7688. Bibcode:2013JAP...114r4307K. doi:10.1063/1.4830016.
  13. ^ Ye, Xue-Sheng; Zhi-Gang Shao; Hongbo Zhao; Lei Yang; Cang-Long Wang (2014). "Intrinsic carrier mobility of germanene is larger than graphene's: first-principle calculations". RSC Advances. 4 (41): 21216–21220. Bibcode:2014RSCAd...421216Y. doi:10.1039/C4RA01802H.
  14. ^ Özçelik, V. Ongun; E. Durgun; Salim Ciraci (2014). "New Phases of Germanene". The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. 5 (15): 2694–2699. arXiv:1407.4170. doi:10.1021/jz500977v. PMID 26277965. S2CID 40693268.
  15. ^ Yuhara, Junji; Hiroki Shimazu; Kouichi Ito; Akio Ohta; Masaaki Araidai; Masashi Kurosawa; Masashi Nakatake; Guy Le Lay (2018). "Germanene Epitaxial Growth by Segregation through Ag(111) Thin Films on Ge(111)". ACS Nano. 12 (11): 11632–11637. doi:10.1021/acsnano.8b07006. PMID 30371060. S2CID 53102735.
  16. ^ Ni, Zeyuan; Qihang, Liu; Tang, Kechao; Zheng, Jiaxin; Zhou, Jing; Qin, Rui; Gao, Zhengxiang; Yu, Dapeng; Lu, Jing (2012). "Tunable Bandgap in Silicene and Germanene". Nano Letters. 12 (1): 113–118. Bibcode:2012NanoL..12..113N. doi:10.1021/nl203065e. PMID 22050667.
  17. ^ Scalise, Emilio; Michel Houssa; Geoffrey Pourtois; B. van den Broek; Valery Afanas’ev; André Stesmans (2013). "Vibrational properties of silicene and germanene". Nano Research. 6 (1): 19–28. doi:10.1007/s12274-012-0277-3. S2CID 137641923.
  18. ^ Garcia, J. C.; de Lima, D. B.; Assali, L. V. C.; Justo, J. F. (2011). "Group IV graphene- and graphane-like nanosheets". J. Phys. Chem. C. 115 (27): 13242–13246. arXiv:1204.2875. doi:10.1021/jp203657w. S2CID 98682200.
  19. ^ Kaneko, Shiro; Tsuchiya, Hideaki; Kamakura, Yoshinari; Mori, Nobuya; Ogawa, Matsuto (2014). "Theoretical performance estimation of silicene, germanene, and graphene nanoribbon field-effect transistors under ballistic transport". Applied Physics Express. 7 (3): 035102. Bibcode:2014APExp...7c5102K. doi:10.7567/APEX.7.035102. S2CID 95179181.
  20. ^ Roome, Nathanael J.; J. David Carey (2014). "Beyond graphene: stable elemental monolayers of silicene and germanene" (PDF). ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 6 (10): 7743–7750. doi:10.1021/am501022x. PMID 24724967.
  21. ^ Wang, Yang; Brar, Victor W.; Shytov, Andrey V.; Wu, Qiong; Regan, William; Tsai, Hsin-Zon; Zettl, Alex; Levitov, Leonid S.; Crommie, Michael F. (2012). "Mapping Dirac quasiparticles near a single Coulomb impurity on graphene". Nature Physics. 8 (9): 653–657. arXiv:1205.3206. Bibcode:2012NatPh...8..653W. doi:10.1038/nphys2379. S2CID 18586002.
  22. ^ a b Matthes, Lars; Pulci, Olivia; Bechstedt, Friedhelm (2013). "Massive Dirac quasiparticles in the optical absorbance of graphene, silicene, germanene, and tinene". Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter. 25 (39): 395305. Bibcode:2013JPCM...25M5305M. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/25/39/395305. PMID 24002054. S2CID 43075284.
  23. ^ Berger, Andy (17 July 2015). "Beyond Graphene, a Zoo of New 2-D Materials". Discover Magazine. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  24. ^ Zhu, F.; Jia, J. (2015). "Epitaxial growth of two-dimensional stanene". Nature Materials. 14 (10): 1020–1025. arXiv:1506.01601. Bibcode:2015NatMa..14.1020Z. doi:10.1038/nmat4384. PMID 26237127. S2CID 18643958.
  25. ^ Yuhara, J.; Fujii, Y.; Le Lay, G. (2018). "Large Area Planar Stanene Epitaxially Grown on Ag(111)". 2D Materials. 5 (2): 025002. Bibcode:2018TDM.....5b5002Y. doi:10.1088/2053-1583/aa9ea0. hdl:21.11116/0000-0001-A92C-0.
  26. ^ Yuhara, J.; He, B.; Le Lay, G. (2019). "Graphene's Latest Cousin: Plumbene Epitaxial Growth on a "Nano WaterCube"". Advanced Materials. 31 (27): 1901017. Bibcode:2019AdM....3101017Y. doi:10.1002/adma.201901017. PMID 31074927. S2CID 149446617.

External links edit

  • Meet Graphene's Sexy New Cousin Germanene
  • Scientists Use Gold Substrate to Grow Graphene's Cousin, Germanene
  • Graphene Family Tree? Germanene Makes Its Appearance
  • Liu, Cheng-Cheng (1 January 2011). "Quantum Spin Hall Effect in Silicene and Two-Dimensional Germanium". Physical Review Letters. 107 (7): 076802. arXiv:1104.1290. Bibcode:2011PhRvL.107g6802L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.076802. PMID 21902414. S2CID 16967564.
  • Liu, Cheng-Cheng (1 January 2011). "Low-energy effective Hamiltonian involving spin-orbit coupling in silicene and two-dimensional germanium and tin". Physical Review B. 84 (19): 195430. arXiv:1108.2933. Bibcode:2011PhRvB..84s5430L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.84.195430. S2CID 44216872.
  • CNRS Website (2015)
  • CNRS Website (2017)