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Dive into the research topics where Jayakumar Balakrishnan is active.

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Featured researches published by Jayakumar Balakrishnan.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2010

Roll-to-roll production of 30-inch graphene films for transparent electrodes

Sukang Bae; Hyeongkeun Kim; Youngbin Lee; Xiangfan Xu; Jaesung Park; Yi Zheng; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Tian Lei; Hye Ri Kim; Young Il Song; Young-Jin Kim; Kwang S. Kim; Barbaros Özyilmaz; Jong-Hyun Ahn; Byung Hee Hong; Sumio Iijima

The outstanding electrical, mechanical and chemical properties of graphene make it attractive for applications in flexible electronics. However, efforts to make transparent conducting films from graphene have been hampered by the lack of efficient methods for the synthesis, transfer and doping of graphene at the scale and quality required for applications. Here, we report the roll-to-roll production and wet-chemical doping of predominantly monolayer 30-inch graphene films grown by chemical vapour deposition onto flexible copper substrates. The films have sheet resistances as low as approximately 125 ohms square(-1) with 97.4% optical transmittance, and exhibit the half-integer quantum Hall effect, indicating their high quality. We further use layer-by-layer stacking to fabricate a doped four-layer film and measure its sheet resistance at values as low as approximately 30 ohms square(-1) at approximately 90% transparency, which is superior to commercial transparent electrodes such as indium tin oxides. Graphene electrodes were incorporated into a fully functional touch-screen panel device capable of withstanding high strain.1 SKKU Advanced Institute of Nanotechnology (SAINT) and Center for Human Interface Nano Technology (HINT), 2 Department of Chemistry, 3 Department of Mechanical Engineering, 4 School of Advanced Materials Science and Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon 440-746, Korea. 5 NanoCore & Department of Physics, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117576 & 117542, 6 Digital & IT Solution Division, Samsung Techwin, Seongnam 462-807, Korea, 7 Nanotube Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba 305-8565 & Faculty of Science and Engineering, Meijo University, Nagoya 468-8502, Japan.


Nature Communications | 2014

Spin–orbit proximity effect in graphene

Ahmet Avsar; Jun You Tan; T. Taychatanapat; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Gavin Kok Wai Koon; Y. C. Yeo; J. Lahiri; A. Carvalho; A. S. Rodin; E. C. T. O’Farrell; Goki Eda; A. H. Castro Neto; Barbaros Özyilmaz

The development of spintronics devices relies on efficient generation of spin-polarized currents and their electric-field-controlled manipulation. While observation of exceptionally long spin relaxation lengths makes graphene an intriguing material for spintronics studies, electric field modulation of spin currents is almost impossible due to negligible intrinsic spin-orbit coupling of graphene. In this work, we create an artificial interface between monolayer graphene and few-layer semiconducting tungsten disulphide. In these devices, we observe that graphene acquires spin-orbit coupling up to 17 meV, three orders of magnitude higher than its intrinsic value, without modifying the structure of the graphene. The proximity spin-orbit coupling leads to the spin Hall effect even at room temperature, and opens the door to spin field effect transistors. We show that intrinsic defects in tungsten disulphide play an important role in this proximity effect and that graphene can act as a probe to detect defects in semiconducting surfaces.


Nano Letters | 2011

Toward Wafer Scale Fabrication of Graphene Based Spin Valve Devices

Ahmet Avsar; Tsung-Yeh Yang; Sukang Bae; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Frank Volmer; Manu Jaiswal; Zheng Yi; Syed Rizwan Ali; G. Güntherodt; Byung Hee Hong; Bernd Beschoten; Barbaros Özyilmaz

We demonstrate injection, transport, and detection of spins in spin valve arrays patterned in both copper based chemical vapor deposition (Cu-CVD) synthesized wafer scale single layer and bilayer graphene. We observe spin relaxation times comparable to those reported for exfoliated graphene samples demonstrating that chemical vapor deposition specific structural differences such as nanoripples do not limit spin transport in the present samples. Our observations make Cu-CVD graphene a promising material of choice for large scale spintronic applications.


Nature Communications | 2014

Giant spin Hall effect in graphene grown by chemical vapour deposition

Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Gavin Kok Wai Koon; Ahmet Avsar; Yuda Ho; Jong Hak Lee; Manu Jaiswal; Seung Jae Baeck; Jong-Hyun Ahn; Aires Ferreira; Miguel A. Cazalilla; Antonio H. Castro Neto; Barbaros Özyilmaz

Advances in large-area graphene synthesis via chemical vapour deposition on metals like copper were instrumental in the demonstration of graphene-based novel, wafer-scale electronic circuits and proof-of-concept applications such as flexible touch panels. Here, we show that graphene grown by chemical vapour deposition on copper is equally promising for spintronics applications. In contrast to natural graphene, our experiments demonstrate that chemically synthesized graphene has a strong spin-orbit coupling as high as 20 meV giving rise to a giant spin Hall effect. The exceptionally large spin Hall angle ~0.2 provides an important step towards graphene-based spintronics devices within existing complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology. Our microscopic model shows that unavoidable residual copper adatom clusters act as local spin-orbit scatterers and, in the resonant scattering limit, induce transverse spin currents with enhanced skew-scattering contribution. Our findings are confirmed independently by introducing metallic adatoms-copper, silver and gold on exfoliated graphene samples.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Electronic transport in graphene-based heterostructures

Jun You Tan; Ahmet Avsar; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Gavin Kok Wai Koon; T. Taychatanapat; O'Farrell Ec; Kenji Watanabe; T. Taniguchi; Goki Eda; A. H. Castro Neto; Barbaros Özyilmaz

While boron nitride (BN) substrates have been utilized to achieve high electronic mobilities in graphene field effect transistors, it is unclear how other layered two dimensional (2D) crystals influence the electronic performance of graphene. In this Letter, we study the surface morphology of 2D BN, gallium selenide (GaSe), and transition metal dichalcogenides (tungsten disulfide (WS2) and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2)) crystals and their influence on graphenes electronic quality. Atomic force microscopy analysis shows that these crystals have improved surface roughness (root mean square value of only ∼0.1 nm) compared to conventional SiO2 substrate. While our results confirm that graphene devices exhibit very high electronic mobility (μ) on BN substrates, graphene devices on WS2 substrates (G/WS2) are equally promising for high quality electronic transport (μ ∼ 38 000 cm2/V s at room temperature), followed by G/MoS2 (μ ∼ 10 000 cm2/V s) and G/GaSe (μ ∼ 2200 cm2/V s). However, we observe a significant asym...


Scientific Reports | 2018

A Low-Cost Non-explosive Synthesis of Graphene Oxide for Scalable Applications

Pranay Ranjan; Shweta Agrawal; Apurva Sinha; T. Rajagopala Rao; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Ajay D. Thakur

A low cost, non-explosive process for the synthesis of graphene oxide (GO) is demonstrated. Using suitable choice of reaction parameters including temperature and time, this recipe does not require expensive membranes for filtration of carbonaceous and metallic residues. A pre-cooling protocol is introduced to control the explosive nature of the highly exothermic reactions during the oxidation process. This alleviates the requirement for expensive membranes and completely eliminates the explosive nature of intermediate reaction steps when compared to existing methods. High quality of the synthesized GO is corroborated using a host of characterization techniques including X-ray diffraction, optical spectroscopy, X-ray photoemission spectroscopy and current-voltage characteristics. Simple reduction protocol using ultra-violet light is demonstrated for potential application in the area of photovoltaics. Using different reduction protocols together with the proposed inexpensive method, reduced GO samples with tunable conductance over a wide range of values is demonstrated. Density functional theory is employed to understand the structure of GO. We anticipate that this scalable approach will catalyze large scale applications of GO.


Nature Physics | 2013

Colossal enhancement of spin–orbit coupling in weakly hydrogenated graphene

Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Gavin Kok Wai Koon; Manu Jaiswal; A. H. Castro Neto; Barbaros Özyilmaz


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Observation of long spin-relaxation times in bilayer graphene at room temperature.

Tsung-Yeh Yang; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Frank Volmer; Ahmet Avsar; Manu Jaiswal; Samm J; Ali; Alexandre Pachoud; Minggang Zeng; Popinciuc M; G. Güntherodt; Bernd Beschoten; Barbaros Özyilmaz


Small | 2015

‘Bubble‐Free’ Electrochemical Delamination of CVD Graphene Films

Christie Thomas Cherian; Francesco Giustiniano; Iñigo Martin-Fernandez; Henrik L. Andersen; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Barbaros Özyilmaz


Scientific Reports | 2015

Unconventional Transport through Graphene on SrTiO3: A Plausible Effect of SrTiO3 Phase-Transitions

Surajit Saha; Orhan Kahya; Manu Jaiswal; Amar Srivastava; A. Annadi; Jayakumar Balakrishnan; Alexandre Pachoud; Chee-Tat Toh; Byung-Hee Hong; Jong-Hyun Ahn; T. Venkatesan; Barbaros Özyilmaz

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Barbaros Özyilmaz

National University of Singapore

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Gavin Kok Wai Koon

National University of Singapore

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Ahmet Avsar

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Manu Jaiswal

Indian Institute of Technology Madras

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A. H. Castro Neto

National University of Singapore

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Pranay Ranjan

Indian Institute of Technology Patna

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Alexandre Pachoud

National University of Singapore

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Goki Eda

National University of Singapore

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Jun You Tan

National University of Singapore

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