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Dive into the research topics where Biswanath Chakraborty is active.

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Featured researches published by Biswanath Chakraborty.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2008

Monitoring dopants by Raman scattering in an electrochemically top-gated graphene transistor

A. Das; Simone Pisana; Biswanath Chakraborty; S. Piscanec; Srijan Kumar Saha; Umesh V. Waghmare; K. S. Novoselov; H. R. Krishnamurthy; A. K. Geim; A. C. Ferrari; A. K. Sood

We demonstrate electrochemical top gating of graphene by using a solid polymer electrolyte. This allows to reach much higher electron and hole doping than standard back gating. In-situ Raman measurements monitor the doping. The G peak stiffens and sharpens for both electron and hole doping, while the 2D peak shows a different response to holes and electrons. Its position increases for hole doping, while it softens for high electron doping. The variation of G peak position is a signature of the non-adiabatic Kohn anomaly at


Physical Review B | 2012

Symmetry-dependent phonon renormalization in monolayer MoS2 transistor

Biswanath Chakraborty; Achintya Bera; D. V. S. Muthu; Somnath Bhowmick; Umesh V. Waghmare; A. K. Sood

\Gamma


Physical Review B | 2009

Phonon renormalization in doped bilayer graphene

Anindya Das; Biswanath Chakraborty; S. Piscanec; Simone Pisana; A. K. Sood; A. C. Ferrari

. On the other hand, for visible excitation, the variation of the 2D peak position is ruled by charge transfer. The intensity ratio of G and 2D peaks shows a strong dependence on doping, making it a sensitive parameter to monitor charges.The recent discovery of graphene has led to many advances in two-dimensional physics and devices. The graphene devices fabricated so far have relied on SiO(2) back gating. Electrochemical top gating is widely used for polymer transistors, and has also been successfully applied to carbon nanotubes. Here we demonstrate a top-gated graphene transistor that is able to reach doping levels of up to 5x1013 cm-2, which is much higher than those previously reported. Such high doping levels are possible because the nanometre-thick Debye layer in the solid polymer electrolyte gate provides a much higher gate capacitance than the commonly used SiO(2) back gate, which is usually about 300 nm thick. In situ Raman measurements monitor the doping. The G peak stiffens and sharpens for both electron and hole doping, but the 2D peak shows a different response to holes and electrons. The ratio of the intensities of the G and 2D peaks shows a strong dependence on doping, making it a sensitive parameter to monitor the doping.


Journal of Experimental Nanoscience | 2011

Molecular charge-transfer interaction with single-layer graphene

Dattatray J. Late; Anupama Ghosh; Biswanath Chakraborty; A. K. Sood; Umesh V. Waghmare; C. N. R. Rao

A strong electron-phonon interaction which limits the electronic mobility of semiconductors can also have significant effects on phonon frequencies. The latter is the key to the use of Raman spectroscopy for nondestructive characterization of doping in graphene-based devices. Using in situ Raman scattering from a single-layer MoS2 electrochemically top-gated field-effect transistor (FET), we show softening and broadening of the A(1g) phonon with electron doping, whereas the other Raman-active E-2g(1) mode remains essentially inert. Confirming these results with first-principles density functional theory based calculations, we use group theoretical arguments to explain why the A(1g) mode specifically exhibits a strong sensitivity to electron doping. Our work opens up the use of Raman spectroscopy in probing the level of doping in single-layer MoS2-based FETs, which have a high on-off ratio and are of technological significance.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Enhancing photoresponsivity using MoTe2-graphene vertical heterostructures

Manabendra Kuiri; Biswanath Chakraborty; Arup Kumar Paul; Subhadip Das; Apra Sood; Anindya Das

We report phonon renormalization in bilayer graphene as a function of doping. The Raman G peak stiffens and sharpens for both electron and hole doping as a result of the nonadiabatic Kohn anomaly at the Gamma point. The bilayer has two conduction and valence subbands, with splitting dependent on the interlayer coupling. This gives a change of slope in the variation of G peak position with doping which allows a direct measurement of the interlayer coupling strength.


Nanotechnology | 2009

The formation of a p-n junction in a polymer electrolyte top-gated bilayer graphene transistor

Biswanath Chakraborty; Anindya Das; A. K. Sood

While the effect of electrochemical doping on single-layer graphene (SG) with holes and electrons has been investigated, the effect of charge-transfer doping on SG has not been examined hitherto. Effects of varying the concentration of electron donor and acceptor molecules such as tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) and tetracyanoethylene (TCNE) on SG produced by mechanical exfoliation as well as by the reduction of single-layer graphene oxide have been investigated. TTF softens the G-band in the Raman spectrum, whereas TCNE stiffens the G-band. The full-width-at-half-maximum of the G-band increases on interaction with both TTF and TCNE. These effects are similar to those found with few-layer graphene, but in contrast to those found with electrochemical doping. A common feature between the two types of doping is found in the case of the 2-D band, which shows softening and stiffening on electron and hole doping, respectively. The experimental results are explained on the basis of the frequency shifts, electron–phonon coupling and structural inhomogeneities that are relevant to molecule–graphene interaction.


Modern Physics Letters B | 2011

PROBING SINGLE AND BILAYER GRAPHENE FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTORS BY RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY

Anindya Das; Biswanath Chakraborty; A. K. Sood

MoTe2 with a narrow band-gap of ∼1.1 eV is a promising candidate for optoelectronic applications, especially for the near-infrared photo detection. However, the photo responsivity of few layers MoTe2 is very small (<1 mA W−1). In this work, we show that a few layer MoTe2-graphene vertical heterostructures have a much larger photo responsivity of ∼20 mA W−1. The trans-conductance measurements with back gate voltage show on-off ratio of the vertical transistor to be ∼(0.5–1) × 105. The rectification nature of the source-drain current with the back gate voltage reveals the presence of a stronger Schottky barrier at the MoTe2-metal contact as compared to the MoTe2-graphene interface. In order to quantify the barrier height, it is essential to measure the work function of a few layers MoTe2, not known so far. We demonstrate a method to determine the work function by measuring the photo-response of the vertical transistor as a function of the Schottky barrier height at the MoTe2-graphene interface tuned by elec...


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2016

Electron-hole asymmetry in the electron-phonon coupling in top-gated phosphorene transistor

Biswanath Chakraborty; Satyendra Nath Gupta; Ak Singh; Manabendra Kuiri; Chandan Kumar; D. V. S. Muthu; Anindya Das; Umesh V. Waghmare; A. K. Sood

We show simultaneous p- and n-type carrier injection in a bilayer graphene channel by varying the longitudinal bias across the channel and the top-gate voltage. The top gate is applied electrochemically using solid polymer electrolyte and the gate capacitance is measured to be 1.5 microF cm(-2), a value about 125 times higher than the conventional SiO(2) back-gate capacitance. Unlike the single-layer graphene, the drain-source current does not saturate on varying the drain-source bias voltage. The energy gap opened between the valence and conduction bands using top- and back-gate geometry is estimated.


Nanotechnology | 2015

Probing 2D black phosphorus by quantum capacitance measurements.

Manabendra Kuiri; Chandan Kumar; Biswanath Chakraborty; Satyendra Nath Gupta; Mit H. Naik; Manish Jain; Apra Sood; Anindya Das

This article is a review of our work related to Raman studies of single layer and bilayer graphenes as a function Fermi level shift achieved by electrochemically top gating a field effect transistor. Combining the transport and in situ Raman studies of the field effect devices, a quantitative understanding is obtained of the phonon renormalization due to doping of graphene. Results are discussed in the light of time dependent perturbation theory, with electron phonon coupling parameter as an input from the density functional theory. It is seen that phonons near and Gamma and K points of the Brillouin zone are renormalized very differently by doping. Further, Gamma-phonon renormalization is different in bilayer graphene as compared to single layer, originating from their different electronic band structures near the zone boundary K-point. Thus Raman spectroscopy is not only a powerful probe to characterize the number of layers and their quality in a graphene sample, but also to quantitatively evaluate electron phonon coupling required to understand the performance of graphene devices.


npj 2D Materials and Applications | 2017

Photo-tunable transfer characteristics in MoTe 2 –MoS 2 vertical heterostructure

Arup Kumar Paul; Manabendra Kuiri; Dipankar Saha; Biswanath Chakraborty; Santanu Mahapatra; A. K. Sood; Anindya Das

Using in-situ Raman scattering from phosphorene channel in an electrochemically top-gated field effect transistor, we show that its phonons with A

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A. K. Sood

Indian Institute of Science

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Anindya Das

Indian Institute of Science

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Manabendra Kuiri

Indian Institute of Science

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Umesh V. Waghmare

Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research

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Apra Sood

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Arup Kumar Paul

Indian Institute of Science

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C. N. R. Rao

Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research

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Chandan Kumar

Indian Institute of Science

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D. V. S. Muthu

Indian Institute of Science

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