Structural and electrical properties of solid-source MBE-grown graphene/Ge(001) heterostructures
Abstract
We report the structural and electrical properties of a monolayer graphene (Gr) directly grown on Ge(001) by solid-source molecular beam epitaxy (SSMBE), without a transfer step, evaluating the impact of this approach on surface homogeneity and the quality of the Gr/Ge interface, two key parameters for the electrical performance of optoelectronic devices. In this work, the electrical and STEM results are discussed for the optimized growth conditions TG = 920°C and tG = 3 h 12 min. The correlation between scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), Raman spectroscopy, and electrical measurements performed on the AuPd/a-Si/Gr/Ge(001) structure reveals a pronounced quantum-capacitance-related capacitive signature, indicating a high-quality interface. The capacitance–voltage (C–V) characteristics exhibit a U-shaped dependence with a marked minimum near the Dirac point (charge neutrality point), followed by an increase in C with |V|; This behavior is consistent with a significant contribution from the finite quantum capacitance of graphene, while the measured capacitance also includes the geometrical capacitance of the a-Si layer, the Gr/Ge interfacial contribution, and the depletion capacitance of the Ge substrate. This quantum-capacitance-related signature persists up to 1 MHz. These properties are attributed to the structural quality of a continuous and uniform graphene monolayer conformally following the Ge topography, with lateral domains reaching ~200 nm, suggesting complete coverage and an overall abrupt interface. This structural quality is further supported by Raman analysis, which shows an enhanced 2D/G ratio under the optimized growth conditions (TG = 920°C, tG = 3 h 12 min). Current–voltage (I–V) characteristics, measured in darkness and under white light, reveal a significant photocurrent, confirming the role of graphene as an efficient 2D collector electrode for photogenerated carriers generated predominantly in the Ge substrate. Beyond measured performance, SSMBE offers a low-contamination, controlled-atomic-flux integration pathway compatible with CMOS platforms, opening up prospects for devices sensitive to surface and interface properties, such as radio-frequency varactors and capacitive readout sensors exploiting exploiting graphene-related quantum-capacitance effects.
Please wait while we load your content...