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Dive into the research topics where Congwei Tan is active.

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Featured researches published by Congwei Tan.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Roll‐to‐Roll Green Transfer of CVD Graphene onto Plastic for a Transparent and Flexible Triboelectric Nanogenerator

Bananakere Nanjegowda Chandrashekar; Bing Deng; Ankanahalli Shankaregowda Smitha; Yubin Chen; Congwei Tan; Haixia Zhang; Hailin Peng; Zhongfan Liu

A novel roll-to-roll, etching-free, clean transfer of CVD-grown graphene from copper to plastic using surface-energy-assisted delamination in hot deionized water is reported. The delamination process is realized by water penetration between the hydrophobic graphene and a hydrophilic native oxide layer on a copper foil.The transferred graphene on plastic is used as a high-output flexible and transparent triboelectric nanogenerator.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2017

High electron mobility and quantum oscillations in non-encapsulated ultrathin semiconducting Bi2O2Se

Jinxiong Wu; Hongtao Yuan; Mengmeng Meng; Cheng Chen; Yan Sun; Zhuoyu Chen; Wenhui Dang; Congwei Tan; Yujing Liu; Jianbo Yin; Yubing Zhou; Shaoyun Huang; Hongqi Xu; Yi Cui; Harold Y. Hwang; Zhongfan Liu; Yulin Chen; Binghai Yan; Hailin Peng

High-mobility semiconducting ultrathin films form the basis of modern electronics, and may lead to the scalable fabrication of highly performing devices. Because the ultrathin limit cannot be reached for traditional semiconductors, identifying new two-dimensional materials with both high carrier mobility and a large electronic bandgap is a pivotal goal of fundamental research. However, air-stable ultrathin semiconducting materials with superior performances remain elusive at present. Here, we report ultrathin films of non-encapsulated layered Bi2O2Se, grown by chemical vapour deposition, which demonstrate excellent air stability and high-mobility semiconducting behaviour. We observe bandgap values of ∼0.8 eV, which are strongly dependent on the film thickness due to quantum-confinement effects. An ultrahigh Hall mobility value of >20,000 cm2 V-1 s-1 is measured in as-grown Bi2O2Se nanoflakes at low temperatures. This value is comparable to what is observed in graphene grown by chemical vapour deposition and at the LaAlO3-SrTiO3 interface, making the detection of Shubnikov-de Haas quantum oscillations possible. Top-gated field-effect transistors based on Bi2O2Se crystals down to the bilayer limit exhibit high Hall mobility values (up to 450 cm2 V-1 s-1), large current on/off ratios (>106) and near-ideal subthreshold swing values (∼65 mV dec-1) at room temperature. Our results make Bi2O2Se a promising candidate for future high-speed and low-power electronic applications.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Surface Monocrystallization of Copper Foil for Fast Growth of Large Single-Crystal Graphene under Free Molecular Flow

Huan Wang; Xiaozhi Xu; Jiayu Li; Li Lin; Luzhao Sun; Xiao Sun; Shuli Zhao; Congwei Tan; Cheng Chen; Wenhui Dang; Huaying Ren; Jincan Zhang; Bing Deng; Ai Leen Koh; Lei Liao; N. Kang; Yulin Chen; Hongqi Xu; Feng Ding; Kaihui Liu; Hailin Peng; Zhongfan Liu

Wafer-sized single-crystalline Cu (100) surface can be readily achieved on stacked polycrystalline Cu foils via simple oxygen chemisorption-induced reconstruction, enabling fast growth of large-scale millimeter-sized single-crystalline graphene arrays under molecular flow. The maximum growth rate can reach 300 μm min-1 , several orders of magnitude higher than previously reported values for millimeter-sized single-crystalline graphene growth on Cu foils.


Nano Letters | 2017

Controlled Synthesis of High-Mobility Atomically Thin Bismuth Oxyselenide Crystals

Jinxiong Wu; Congwei Tan; Zhenjun Tan; Yujing Liu; Jianbo Yin; Wenhui Dang; Mingzhan Wang; Hailin Peng

Non-neutral layered crystals, another group of two-dimensional (2D) materials that lack a well-defined van der Waals (vdWs) gap, are those that form strong chemical bonds in-plane but display weak out-of-plane electrostatic interactions, exhibiting intriguing properties for the bulk counterpart. However, investigation of the properties of their atomically thin counterpart are very rare presumably due to the absence of efficient ways to achieve large-area high-quality 2D crystals. Here, high-mobility atomically thin Bi2O2Se, a typical non-neutral layered crystal without a standard vdWs gap, was synthesized via a facial chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method, showing excellent controllability for thickness, domain size, nucleation site, and crystal-phase evolution. Atomically thin, large single crystals of Bi2O2Se with lateral size up to ∼200 μm and thickness down to a bilayer were obtained. Moreover, optical and electrical properties of the CVD-grown 2D Bi2O2Se crystals were investigated, displaying a size-tunable band gap upon thinning and an ultrahigh Hall mobility of >20000 cm2 V-1 s-1 at 2 K. Our results on the high-mobility 2D Bi2O2Se semiconductor may activate the synthesis and related fundamental research of other non-neutral 2D materials.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Chemical Patterning of High‐Mobility Semiconducting 2D Bi2O2Se Crystals for Integrated Optoelectronic Devices

Jinxiong Wu; Yujing Liu; Zhenjun Tan; Congwei Tan; Jianbo Yin; Tianran Li; Teng Tu; Hailin Peng

Patterning of high-mobility 2D semiconducting materials with unique layered structures and superb electronic properties offers great potential for batch fabrication and integration of next-generation electronic and optoelectronic devices. Here, a facile approach is used to achieve accurate patterning of 2D high-mobility semiconducting Bi2 O2 Se crystals using dilute H2 O2 and protonic mixture acid as efficient etchants. The 2D Bi2 O2 Se crystal after chemical etching maintains a high Hall mobility of over 200 cm2 V-1 s-1 at room temperature. Centimeter-scale well-ordered arrays of 2D Bi2 O2 Se with tailorable configurations are readily obtained. Furthermore, integrated photodetectors based on 2D Bi2 O2 Se arrays are fabricated, exhibiting excellent air stability and high photoresponsivity of ≈2000 A W-1 at 532 nm. These results are one step towards the practical application of ultrathin 2D integrated digital and optoelectronic circuits.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Clean Transfer of Large Graphene Single Crystals for High-Intactness Suspended Membranes and Liquid Cells

Jincan Zhang; Li Lin; Luzhao Sun; Yucheng Huang; Ai Leen Koh; Wenhui Dang; Jianbo Yin; Mingzhan Wang; Congwei Tan; Tianran Li; Zhenjun Tan; Zhongfan Liu; Hailin Peng

The atomically thin 2D nature of suspended graphene membranes holds promising in numerous technological applications. In particular, the outstanding transparency to electron beam endows graphene membranes great potential as a candidate for specimen support of transmission electron microscopy (TEM). However, major hurdles remain to be addressed to acquire an ultraclean, high-intactness, and defect-free suspended graphene membrane. Here, a polymer-free clean transfer of sub-centimeter-sized graphene single crystals onto TEM grids to fabricate large-area and high-quality suspended graphene membranes has been achieved. Through the control of interfacial force during the transfer, the intactness of large-area graphene membranes can be as high as 95%, prominently larger than reported values in previous works. Graphene liquid cells are readily prepared by π-π stacking two clean single-crystal graphene TEM grids, in which atomic-scale resolution imaging and temporal evolution of colloid Au nanoparticles are recorded. This facile and scalable production of clean and high-quality suspended graphene membrane is promising toward their wide applications for electron and optical microscopy.


Small | 2018

Low-Temperature and Rapid Growth of Large Single-Crystalline Graphene with Ethane

Xiao Sun; Li Lin; Luzhao Sun; Jincan Zhang; Dingran Rui; Jiayu Li; Mingzhan Wang; Congwei Tan; N. Kang; Di Wei; Hongqi Xu; Hailin Peng; Zhongfan Liu

Future applications of graphene rely highly on the production of large-area high-quality graphene, especially large single-crystalline graphene, due to the reduction of defects caused by grain boundaries. However, current large single-crystalline graphene growing methodologies are suffering from low growth rate and as a result, industrial graphene production is always confronted by high energy consumption, which is primarily caused by high growth temperature and long growth time. Herein, a new growth condition achieved via ethane being the carbon feedstock to achieve low-temperature yet rapid growth of large single-crystalline graphene is reported. Ethane condition gives a growth rate about four times faster than methane, achieving about 420 µm min-1 for the growth of sub-centimeter graphene single crystals at temperature about 1000 °C. In addition, the temperature threshold to obtain graphene using ethane can be reduced to 750 °C, lower than the general growth temperature threshold (about 1000 °C) with methane on copper foil. Meanwhile ethane always keeps higher graphene growth rate than methane under the same growth temperature. This study demonstrates that ethane is indeed a potential carbon source for efficient growth of large single-crystalline graphene, thus paves the way for graphene in high-end electronical and optoelectronical applications.


Nanoscale | 2018

Strong spin–orbit interaction and magnetotransport in semiconductor Bi2O2Se nanoplates

Mengmeng Meng; Shaoyun Huang; Congwei Tan; Jinxiong Wu; Yumei Jing; Hailing Peng; Hongqi Xu

Semiconductor Bi2O2Se nanolayers of high crystal quality have been realized via epitaxial growth. These two-dimensional (2D) materials possess excellent electron transport properties with potential application in nanoelectronics. It is also strongly expected that the 2D Bi2O2Se nanolayers can be an excellent material platform for developing spintronic and topological quantum devices if the presence of strong spin-orbit interaction in the 2D materials can be experimentally demonstrated. Herein, we report the experimental determination of the strength of spin-orbit interactions in Bi2O2Se nanoplates through magnetotransport measurements. The nanoplates are epitaxially grown by chemical vapor deposition, and the magnetotransport measurements are performed at low temperatures. The measured magnetoconductance exhibits a crossover behavior from weak antilocalization to weak localization at low magnetic fields with increasing temperature or decreasing back gate voltage. We have analyzed this transition behavior of magnetoconductance based on an interference theory, which describes quantum correction to the magnetoconductance of a 2D system in the presence of spin-orbit interaction. Dephasing length and spin relaxation length are extracted from the magnetoconductance measurements. Compared to the case of other semiconductor nanostructures, the extracted relatively short spin relaxation length of ∼150 nm indicates the existence of a strong spin-orbit interaction in Bi2O2Se nanolayers.


Small | 2017

Epitaxial Growth of Ternary Topological Insulator Bi2Te2Se 2D Crystals on Mica

Yujing Liu; Min Tang; Mengmeng Meng; Mingzhan Wang; Jinxiong Wu; Jianbo Yin; Yubing Zhou; Yunfan Guo; Congwei Tan; Wenhui Dang; Shaoyun Huang; Hongqi Xu; Yong Wang; Hailin Peng

Nanostructures of ternary topological insulator (TI) Bi2 Te2 Se are, in principle, advantageous to the manifestation of topologically nontrivial surface states, due to significantly enhanced surface-to-volume ratio compared with its bulk crystals counterparts. Herein, the synthesis of 2D Bi2 Te2 Se crystals on mica via the van der Waals epitaxy method is explored and systematically the growth behaviors during the synthesis process are investigated. Accordingly, 2D Bi2 Te2 Se crystals with domain size up to 50 µm large and thickness down to 2 nm are obtained. A pronounced weak antilocalization effect is clearly observed in the 2D Bi2 Te2 Se crystals at 2 K. The method for epitaxial growth of 2D ternary Bi2 Te2 Se crystals may inspire materials engineering toward enhanced manifestation of the subtle surface states of TIs and thereby facilitate their potential applications in next-generation spintronics.


international conference on solid state and integrated circuits technology | 2001

Estimation of interface roughness using tunneling current in ultrathin MOSFET

Lingfeng Mao; Heqiu Zhang; Jinqi Wei; Congwei Tan; Mingzhen Xu

Interface roughness effects on tunneling current in ultrathin MOS structures are investigated theoretically. The roughness at SiO/sub 2//Si interface is described in terms of Gauss distribution. It is shown that the effects of rough surface on tunneling current can not be neglected while tunneling occurs. The effect of rms (root-mean-square) roughness on the direct tunneling current decreases with the applied voltage increase and increases with rms roughness increase and the effects increase exponentially with oxide thickness or applied voltage decrease. The applied voltage shift at the extreme of current oscillations increases linearly with SiO/sub 2//Si interface roughness increase. The amplitudes of current oscillations in ultrathin gate oxides are shown to decrease with SiO/sub 2//Si interface roughness increase. The factor of attenuation amplitudes increases exponentially with SiO/sub 2//Si interface roughness increase. This means that this shift may be used to obtain the information about the interface roughness as an inexpensive and simple tool.

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