Excellent electronic transport in heterostructures of graphene and monoisotopic boron-nitride grown at atmospheric pressure

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Abstract

Hexagonal boron nitride (BN), one of the very few layered insulators, plays a crucial role in 2D materials research. In particular, BN grown with a high pressure technique has proven to be an excellent substrate material for graphene and related 2D materials, but at the same time very hard to replace. Here we report on a method of growth at atmospheric pressure as a true alternative for producing BN for high quality graphene/BN heterostructures. The process is not only more scalable, but also allows to grow isotopically purified BN crystals. We employ Raman spectroscopy, cathodoluminescence, and electronic transport measurements to show the high-quality of such monoisotopic BN and its potential for graphene-based heterostructures. The excellent electronic performance of our heterostructures is demonstrated by well developed fractional quantum Hall states, ballistic transport over distances around 10 µm at low temperatures and electron-phonon scattering limited transport at room temperature.

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Sonntag, J., Li, J., Plaud, A., Loiseau, A., Barjon, J., Edgar, J. H., & Stampfer, C. (2020). Excellent electronic transport in heterostructures of graphene and monoisotopic boron-nitride grown at atmospheric pressure. 2D Materials, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/2053-1583/ab89e5

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