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Dive into the research topics where Dhiraj Prasai is active.

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Featured researches published by Dhiraj Prasai.


ACS Nano | 2012

Graphene: Corrosion-Inhibiting Coating

Dhiraj Prasai; Juan C. Tuberquia; Robert R. Harl; G. Kane Jennings; Kirill Bolotin

We report the use of atomically thin layers of graphene as a protective coating that inhibits corrosion of underlying metals. Here, we employ electrochemical methods to study the corrosion inhibition of copper and nickel by either growing graphene on these metals, or by mechanically transferring multilayer graphene onto them. Cyclic voltammetry measurements reveal that the graphene coating effectively suppresses metal oxidation and oxygen reduction. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements suggest that while graphene itself is not damaged, the metal under it is corroded at cracks in the graphene film. Finally, we use Tafel analysis to quantify the corrosion rates of samples with and without graphene coatings. These results indicate that copper films coated with graphene grown via chemical vapor deposition are corroded 7 times slower in an aerated Na(2)SO(4) solution as compared to the corrosion rate of bare copper. Tafel analysis reveals that nickel with a multilayer graphene film grown on it corrodes 20 times slower while nickel surfaces coated with four layers of mechanically transferred graphene corrode 4 times slower than bare nickel. These findings establish graphene as the thinnest known corrosion-protecting coating.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Probing excitonic states in suspended two-dimensional semiconductors by photocurrent spectroscopy

Andrey Klots; A.K.M. Newaz; Bin Wang; Dhiraj Prasai; H. Krzyzanowska; Junhao Lin; Dave Caudel; Nirmal Ghimire; Jiaqiang Yan; B. L. Ivanov; K. A. Velizhanin; Arnold Burger; David Mandrus; N. H. Tolk; Sokrates T. Pantelides; Kirill Bolotin

The optical response of semiconducting monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) is dominated by strongly bound excitons that are stable even at room temperature. However, substrate-related effects such as screening and disorder in currently available specimens mask many anticipated physical phenomena and limit device applications of TMDCs. Here, we demonstrate that that these undesirable effects are strongly suppressed in suspended devices. Extremely robust (photogain > 1,000) and fast (response time < 1 ms) photoresponse allow us to study, for the first time, the formation, binding energies, and dissociation mechanisms of excitons in TMDCs through photocurrent spectroscopy. By analyzing the spectral positions of peaks in the photocurrent and by comparing them with first-principles calculations, we obtain binding energies, band gaps and spin-orbit splitting in monolayer TMDCs. For monolayer MoS2, in particular, we obtain an extremely large binding energy for band-edge excitons, Ebind ≥ 570 meV. Along with band-edge excitons, we observe excitons associated with a van Hove singularity of rather unique nature. The analysis of the source-drain voltage dependence of photocurrent spectra reveals exciton dissociation and photoconversion mechanisms in TMDCs.


Nanoscale | 2013

Three-dimensional graphene foams promote osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells

Spencer W. Crowder; Dhiraj Prasai; Rutwik Rath; Daniel A. Balikov; Hojae Bae; Kirill Bolotin; Hak-Joon Sung

Graphene is a novel material whose application in biomedical sciences has only begun to be realized. In the present study, we have employed three-dimensional graphene foams as culture substrates for human mesenchymal stem cells and provide evidence that these materials can maintain stem cell viability and promote osteogenic differentiation.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Flexible metallic nanowires with self-adaptive contacts to semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenide monolayers

Junhao Lin; Ovidiu Cretu; Wu Zhou; Kazu Suenaga; Dhiraj Prasai; Kirill Bolotin; Nguyen Thanh Cuong; Minoru Otani; Susumu Okada; Andrew R. Lupini; Juan-Carlos Idrobo; Dave Caudel; Arnold Burger; Nirmal Ghimire; Jiaqiang Yan; David Mandrus; Stephen J. Pennycook; Sokrates T. Pantelides

In the pursuit of ultrasmall electronic components, monolayer electronic devices have recently been fabricated using transition-metal dichalcogenides. Monolayers of these materials are semiconducting, but nanowires with stoichiometry MX (M = Mo or W, X = S or Se) have been predicted to be metallic. Such nanowires have been chemically synthesized. However, the controlled connection of individual nanowires to monolayers, an important step in creating a two-dimensional integrated circuit, has so far remained elusive. In this work, by steering a focused electron beam, we directly fabricate MX nanowires that are less than a nanometre in width and Y junctions that connect designated points within a transition-metal dichalcogenide monolayer. In situ electrical measurements demonstrate that these nanowires are metallic, so they may serve as interconnects in future flexible nanocircuits fabricated entirely from the same monolayer. Sequential atom-resolved Z-contrast images reveal that the nanowires rotate and flex continuously under momentum transfer from the electron beam, while maintaining their structural integrity. They therefore exhibit self-adaptive connections to the monolayer from which they are sculpted. We find that the nanowires remain conductive while undergoing severe mechanical deformations, thus showing promise for mechanically robust flexible electronics. Density functional theory calculations further confirm the metallicity of the nanowires and account for their beam-induced mechanical behaviour. These results show that direct patterning of one-dimensional conducting nanowires in two-dimensional semiconducting materials with nanometre precision is possible using electron-beam-based techniques.


Nano Letters | 2015

Hot Electron-Based Near-Infrared Photodetection Using Bilayer MoS2

Wenyi Wang; Andrey Klots; Dhiraj Prasai; Yuanmu Yang; Kirill Bolotin; Jason Valentine

Recently, there has been much interest in the extraction of hot electrons generated from surface plasmon decay, as this process can be used to achieve additional bandwidth for both photodetectors and photovoltaics. Hot electrons are typically injected into semiconductors over a Schottky barrier between the metal and semiconductor, enabling generation of photocurrent with below bandgap photon illumination. As a two-dimensional semiconductor single and few layer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) has been demonstrated to exhibit internal photogain and therefore becomes an attractive hot electron acceptor. Here, we investigate hot electron-based photodetection in a device consisting of bilayer MoS2 integrated with a plasmonic antenna array. We demonstrate sub-bandgap photocurrent originating from the injection of hot electrons into MoS2 as well as photoamplification that yields a photogain of 10(5). The large photogain results in a photoresponsivity of 5.2 A/W at 1070 nm, which is far above similar silicon-based hot electron photodetectors in which no photoamplification is present. This technique is expected to have potential use in future ultracompact near-infrared photodetection and optical memory devices.


Langmuir | 2013

Photosystem I on Graphene as a Highly Transparent, Photoactive Electrode

Darlene Gunther; Gabriel LeBlanc; Dhiraj Prasai; Jamie R. Zhang; David E. Cliffel; Kirill Bolotin; G. Kane Jennings

We report the fabrication of a hybrid light-harvesting electrode consisting of photosystem I (PSI) proteins extracted from spinach and adsorbed as a monolayer onto electrically contacted, large-area graphene. The transparency of graphene supports the choice of an opaque mediator at elevated concentrations. For example, we report a photocurrent of 550 nA/cm(2) from a monolayer of PSI on graphene in the presence of 20 mM methylene blue, which yields an opaque blue solution. The PSI-modified graphene electrode has a total thickness of less than 10 nm and demonstrates photoactivity that is an order of magnitude larger than that for unmodified graphene, establishing the feasibility of conjoining these nanomaterials as potential constructs in next-generation photovoltaic devices.


Nano Letters | 2015

Electrical Control of near-Field Energy Transfer between Quantum Dots and Two-Dimensional Semiconductors

Dhiraj Prasai; Andrey Klots; A.K.M. Newaz; J. Scott Niezgoda; Noah J. Orfield; Carlos A. Escobar; Alex Wynn; Anatoly Efimov; G. Kane Jennings; Sandra J. Rosenthal; Kirill Bolotin

We investigate near-field energy transfer between chemically synthesized quantum dots (QDs) and two-dimensional semiconductors. We fabricate devices in which electrostatically gated semiconducting monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) is placed atop a homogeneous self-assembled layer of core-shell CdSSe QDs. We demonstrate efficient nonradiative Förster resonant energy transfer (FRET) from QDs into MoS2 and prove that modest gate-induced variation in the excitonic absorption of MoS2 leads to large (∼500%) changes in the FRET rate. This in turn allows for up to ∼75% electrical modulation of QD photoluminescence intensity. The hybrid QD/MoS2 devices operate within a small voltage range, allow for continuous modification of the QD photoluminescence intensity, and can be used for selective tuning of QDs emitting in the visible-IR range.


Nano Letters | 2012

Graphene transistor as a probe for streaming potential.

A.K.M. Newaz; D. A. Markov; Dhiraj Prasai; Kirill Bolotin

We explore the dependence of electrical transport in a graphene field effect transistor (GraFET) on the flow of water/sodium chloride electrolyte within the immediate vicinity of that transistor. We find large and reproducible shifts in the charge neutrality point of GraFETs that are dependent on the liquid velocity and the ion concentration. We show that these shifts are consistent with the variation of the local electrochemical potential of the liquid next to graphene that are caused by the fluid flow (streaming potential). Furthermore, we utilize the sensitivity of electrical transport in GraFETs to the parameters of the fluid flow to demonstrate graphene-based mass flow and ionic concentration sensing. We successfully detect a flow as small as ∼70 nL/min and detect a change in the ionic concentration as small as ∼40 nM.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Using Voronoi tessellations to assess nanoparticle-nanoparticle interactions and ordering in monolayer films formed through electrophoretic deposition.

Alex J. Krejci; Colin G. W. Thomas; Jyotirmoy Mandal; Isabel Gonzalo-Juan; Weidong He; Ryan L. Stillwell; J.-H. Park; Dhiraj Prasai; Vyacheslav Volkov; Kirill Bolotin; James H. Dickerson

Monolayers of iron oxide nanoparticles of two different sizes, 9.6 nm and 16.5 nm, were fabricated through electrophoretic deposition. The arrangements of nanoparticles within the films were analyzed using the technique of Voronoi tessellations. These analyses indicated that the films possessed equivalent degrees of ordering, and that the films were uniform over centimeter length scales. Precise measurements of the interparticle spacing were obtained, and the magnitudes of magnetic dipole interactions were calculated. The dipole-dipole interaction among the larger nanoparticles was 14 times larger than that of the smaller nanoparticles, indicating that magnetic coupling interactions could not have been the lone source of ordering in the system.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Controlled dynamic screening of excitonic complexes in 2D semiconductors

Andrey Klots; Benjamin Weintrub; Dhiraj Prasai; Daniel Kidd; Kalman Varga; Kirill A. Velizhanin; Kirill Bolotin

We report a combined theoretical/experimental study of dynamic screening of excitons in media with frequency-dependent dielectric functions. We develop an analytical model showing that interparticle interactions in an exciton are screened in the range of frequencies from zero to the characteristic binding energy depending on the symmetries and transition energies of that exciton. The problem of the dynamic screening is then reduced to simply solving the Schrodinger equation with an effectively frequency-independent potential. Quantitative predictions of the model are experimentally verified using a test system: neutral, charged and defect-bound excitons in two-dimensional monolayer WS2, screened by metallic, liquid, and semiconducting environments. The screening-induced shifts of the excitonic peaks in photoluminescence spectra are in good agreement with our model.

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David Mandrus

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Jiaqiang Yan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Nirmal Ghimire

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Junhao Lin

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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