Cargando…

The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures

[Image: see text] Interfacial water molecules affect carrier transportation within graphene and related applications. Without proper tools, however, most of the previous works focus on simulation modeling rather than experimental validation. To overcome this obstacle, a series of graphene field-effe...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tsai, Ming-Hsiu, Lu, Yu-Xuan, Lin, Cheng-Yu, Lin, Chun-Hsuan, Wang, Chien-Chun, Chu, Che-Men, Woon, Wei-Yen, Lin, Chih-Ting
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10080535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36947433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c00037
_version_ 1785020944590307328
author Tsai, Ming-Hsiu
Lu, Yu-Xuan
Lin, Cheng-Yu
Lin, Chun-Hsuan
Wang, Chien-Chun
Chu, Che-Men
Woon, Wei-Yen
Lin, Chih-Ting
author_facet Tsai, Ming-Hsiu
Lu, Yu-Xuan
Lin, Cheng-Yu
Lin, Chun-Hsuan
Wang, Chien-Chun
Chu, Che-Men
Woon, Wei-Yen
Lin, Chih-Ting
author_sort Tsai, Ming-Hsiu
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Interfacial water molecules affect carrier transportation within graphene and related applications. Without proper tools, however, most of the previous works focus on simulation modeling rather than experimental validation. To overcome this obstacle, a series of graphene field-effect transistors (GFETs) with suspended (substrate-free, SF) and supported (oxide-supported, OS) configurations are developed to investigate the graphene–water interface under different hydrophilic conditions. With deionized water environments, in our experiments, the electrical transportation behaviors of the graphene mainly originate from the evolution of the interfacial water-molecule arrangement. Also, these current–voltage behaviors can be used to elucidate the first-water layer at the graphene–water interface. For SF-GFET, our experimental results show positive hysteresis in electrical transportation. These imply highly ordered interfacial water molecules with a separated-ionic distributed structure. For OS-GFET, on the contrary, the negative hysteresis shows the formation of the hydrogen-bond interaction between the interfacial water layer and the SiO(2) substrate under the graphene. This interaction further promotes current conduction through the graphene/water interface. In addition, the net current–voltage relationship also indicates the energy required to change the orientation of the first-layer water molecules during electro-potential change. Therefore, our work gives an insight into graphene–water interfacial evolution with field-effect modulation. Furthermore, this experimental architecture also paves the way for investigating 2D solid–liquid interfacial features.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10080535
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher American Chemical Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100805352023-04-08 The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures Tsai, Ming-Hsiu Lu, Yu-Xuan Lin, Cheng-Yu Lin, Chun-Hsuan Wang, Chien-Chun Chu, Che-Men Woon, Wei-Yen Lin, Chih-Ting ACS Appl Mater Interfaces [Image: see text] Interfacial water molecules affect carrier transportation within graphene and related applications. Without proper tools, however, most of the previous works focus on simulation modeling rather than experimental validation. To overcome this obstacle, a series of graphene field-effect transistors (GFETs) with suspended (substrate-free, SF) and supported (oxide-supported, OS) configurations are developed to investigate the graphene–water interface under different hydrophilic conditions. With deionized water environments, in our experiments, the electrical transportation behaviors of the graphene mainly originate from the evolution of the interfacial water-molecule arrangement. Also, these current–voltage behaviors can be used to elucidate the first-water layer at the graphene–water interface. For SF-GFET, our experimental results show positive hysteresis in electrical transportation. These imply highly ordered interfacial water molecules with a separated-ionic distributed structure. For OS-GFET, on the contrary, the negative hysteresis shows the formation of the hydrogen-bond interaction between the interfacial water layer and the SiO(2) substrate under the graphene. This interaction further promotes current conduction through the graphene/water interface. In addition, the net current–voltage relationship also indicates the energy required to change the orientation of the first-layer water molecules during electro-potential change. Therefore, our work gives an insight into graphene–water interfacial evolution with field-effect modulation. Furthermore, this experimental architecture also paves the way for investigating 2D solid–liquid interfacial features. American Chemical Society 2023-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10080535/ /pubmed/36947433 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c00037 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Tsai, Ming-Hsiu
Lu, Yu-Xuan
Lin, Cheng-Yu
Lin, Chun-Hsuan
Wang, Chien-Chun
Chu, Che-Men
Woon, Wei-Yen
Lin, Chih-Ting
The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures
title The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures
title_full The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures
title_fullStr The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures
title_full_unstemmed The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures
title_short The First-Water-Layer Evolution at the Graphene/Water Interface under Different Electro-Modulated Hydrophilic Conditions Observed by Suspended/Supported Field-Effect-Device Architectures
title_sort first-water-layer evolution at the graphene/water interface under different electro-modulated hydrophilic conditions observed by suspended/supported field-effect-device architectures
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10080535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36947433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c00037
work_keys_str_mv AT tsaiminghsiu thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT luyuxuan thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT linchengyu thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT linchunhsuan thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT wangchienchun thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT chuchemen thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT woonweiyen thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT linchihting thefirstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT tsaiminghsiu firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT luyuxuan firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT linchengyu firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT linchunhsuan firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT wangchienchun firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT chuchemen firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT woonweiyen firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures
AT linchihting firstwaterlayerevolutionatthegraphenewaterinterfaceunderdifferentelectromodulatedhydrophilicconditionsobservedbysuspendedsupportedfieldeffectdevicearchitectures