N. Kang
Peking University
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Publication
Featured researches published by N. Kang.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Yueqin Huang; Rui Zhu; N. Kang; J. Du; Hongqi Xu
Hybrid graphene-PbS quantum dot devices are fabricated on an n-type silicon substrate capped with a thin SiO2 layer and are characterized by photoelectrical measurements. It is shown that the resistance of the graphene channel in the devices exhibits detectable changes when a laser beam is switched on and off on the quantum dots. The model that explains the observed photoresponse phenomenon is illustrated. We also show that the photoresponse signal, i.e., the photoinduced change in the resistance of the graphene channel can be tuned in both magnitude and sign with a voltage applied to the back gate of the devices and is related to the derivative of the transfer characteristics of the graphene channel. Our work shows that the simple hybrid graphene-PbS quantum dot devices can be employed for photodetection applications.
Advanced Materials | 2016
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.
ACS Nano | 2016
Li Lin; Jiayu Li; Huaying Ren; Ai Leen Koh; N. Kang; Hailin Peng; Hongqi Xu; Zhongfan Liu
The controlled growth of high-quality graphene on a large scale is of central importance for applications in electronics and optoelectronics. To minimize the adverse impacts of grain boundaries in large-area polycrystalline graphene, the synthesis of large single crystals of monolayer graphene is one of the key challenges for graphene production. Here, we develop a facile surface-engineering method to grow large single-crystalline monolayer graphene by the passivation of the active sites and the control of graphene nucleation on copper surface using the melamine pretreatment. Centimeter-sized hexagonal single-crystal graphene domains were successfully grown, which exhibit ultrahigh carrier mobilities exceeding 25,000 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) and quantum Hall effects on SiO2 substrates. The underlying mechanism of melamine pretreatments were systematically investigated through elemental analyses of copper surface in the growth process of large single-crystals. This present work provides a surface design of a catalytic substrate for the controlled growth of large-area graphene single crystals.
Nano Letters | 2016
Dong Pan; Dingxun Fan; N. Kang; Jinhua Zhi; Xuezhe Yu; Hongqi Xu; Jianhua Zhao
Growth of high-quality single-crystalline InSb layers remains challenging in material science. Such layered InSb materials are highly desired for searching for and manipulation of Majorana Fermions in solid state, a fundamental research task in physics today, and for development of novel high-speed nanoelectronic and infrared optoelectronic devices. Here, we report on a new route toward growth of single-crystalline, layered InSb materials. We demonstrate the successful growth of free-standing, two-dimensional InSb nanosheets on one-dimensional InAs nanowires by molecular-beam epitaxy. The grown InSb nanosheets are pure zinc-blende single crystals. The length and width of the InSb nanosheets are up to several micrometers and the thickness is down to ∼10 nm. The InSb nanosheets show a clear ambipolar behavior and a high electron mobility. Our work will open up new technology routes toward the development of InSb-based devices for applications in nanoelectronics, optoelectronics, and quantum electronics and for the study of fundamental physical phenomena.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Sufang Li; N. Kang; Dongsheng Fan; Lu-Yan Wang; Yueqin Huang; Philippe Caroff; Hongqi Xu
Hybrid InSb nanowire-superconductor devices are promising for investigating Majorana modes and topological quantum computation in solid-state devices. An experimental realisation of ballistic, phase-coherent superconductor-nanowire hybrid devices is a necessary step towards engineering topological superconducting electronics. Here, we report on a low-temperature transport study of Josephson junction devices fabricated from InSb nanowires grown by molecular-beam epitaxy and provide a clear evidence for phase-coherent, ballistic charge transport through the nanowires in the junctions. We demonstrate that our devices show gate-tunable proximity-induced supercurrent and clear signatures of multiple Andreev reflections in the differential conductance, indicating phase-coherent transport within the junctions. We also observe periodic modulations of the critical current that can be associated with the Fabry-Pérot interference in the nanowires in the ballistic transport regime. Our work shows that the InSb nanowires grown by molecular-beam epitaxy are of excellent material quality and hybrid superconducting devices made from these nanowires are highly desirable for investigation of the novel physics in topological states of matter and for applications in topological quantum electronics.
Nanoscale | 2014
Rui Zhu; Yuanyu Huang; N. Kang; Hongqi Xu
We report on a study of the room-temperature nonlinear charge transport properties of three-terminal junction devices made from graphene. We demonstrate that the graphene three terminal junction devices show a rectification characteristic, namely, when voltages VL = V and VR = -V are applied to the left and the right terminal in a push-pull configuration, the voltage output from the central terminal VC is finite and is scaled approximately with V(2). The rectification coefficient can be effectively tuned by a gate voltage and shows a transport carrier polarity dependence. We further show that the nonlinear charge transport characteristics can be used to probe the electronic structure of graphene nanostructures and to study the thermoelectrical power of graphene. These results show that the graphene three-terminal junction devices could be used as novel building blocks for nanoelectronics and as novel devices for the study of the material properties of graphene on the nanoscale.
Physical Review B | 2017
Sen Li; N. Kang; Philippe Caroff; Hongqi Xu
Hybrid superconductor-semiconducting nanowire devices provide an ideal platform to investigating interesting intragap bound states, such as the Andreev bound states (ABSs), Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR) states, and the Majorana bound states. The competition between Kondo correlations and superconductivity in Josephson quantum dot (QD) devices results in two different ground states and the occurrence of a 0-π quantum phase transition. Here we report on transport measurements on hybrid superconductor-InSb nanowire QD devices with different device geometries. We demonstrate a realization of continuous gate-tunable ABSs with both 0-type levels and π-type levels. This allow us to manipulate the transition between the 0 and π junction and explore charge transport and spectrum in the vicinity of the quantum phase transition regime. Furthermore, we find a coexistence of 0-type ABS and π-type ABS in the same charge state. By measuring temperature and magnetic field evolution of the ABSs, the different natures of the two sets of ABSs are verified, being consistent with the scenario of phase transition between the singlet and doublet ground state. Our study provides insight into Andreev transport properties of hybrid superconductor-QD devices and sheds light on the crossover behavior of the subgap spectrum in the vicinity of the 0-π transition. (Less)
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
Longyan Wang; J. K. Guo; N. Kang; Dong Pan; Sen Li; Dingxun Fan; Jianhua Zhao; Hongqi Xu
We report low-temperature magnetotransport studies of individual InAs nanowires grown by molecule beam epitaxy. At low magnetic fields, the magnetoconductance characteristics exhibit a crossover between weak antilocalization and weak localization by changing either the gate voltage or the temperature. The observed crossover behavior can be well described in terms of relative scales of the transport characteristic lengths extracted based on the quasi-one-dimensional theory of weak localization in the presence of spin-orbit interaction. The spin relaxation length extracted from the magnetoconductance data is found to be in the range of 80–100 nm, indicating the presence of strong spin-orbit coupling in the InAs nanowires. Moreover, the amplitude of universal conductance fluctuations in the nanowires is found to be suppressed at low temperatures due to the presence of strong spin-orbit scattering.
ACS Nano | 2017
Bing Deng; Zhenqian Pang; Shulin Chen; Xin Li; Caixia Meng; Jiayu Li; Mengxi Liu; Juanxia Wu; Yue Qi; Wenhui Dang; Hao Yang; Yanfeng Zhang; Jin Zhang; N. Kang; Hongqi Xu; Qiang Fu; Xiaohui Qiu; Peng Gao; Yujie Wei; Zhongfan Liu; Hailin Peng
Wrinkles are ubiquitous for graphene films grown on various substrates by chemical vapor deposition at high temperature due to the strain induced by thermal mismatch between the graphene and substrates, which greatly degrades the extraordinary properties of graphene. Here we show that the wrinkle formation of graphene grown on Cu substrates is strongly dependent on the crystallographic orientations. Wrinkle-free single-crystal graphene was grown on a wafer-scale twin-boundary-free single-crystal Cu(111) thin film fabricated on sapphire substrate through strain engineering. The wrinkle-free feature of graphene originated from the relatively small thermal expansion of the Cu(111) thin film substrate and the relatively strong interfacial coupling between Cu(111) and graphene, based on the strain analyses as well as molecular dynamics simulations. Moreover, we demonstrated the transfer of an ultraflat graphene film onto target substrates from the reusable single-crystal Cu(111)/sapphire growth substrate. The wrinkle-free graphene shows enhanced electrical mobility compared to graphene with wrinkles.
ACS Nano | 2017
Jiayu Li; Li Lin; Dingran Rui; Qiucheng Li; Jincan Zhang; N. Kang; Yanfeng Zhang; Hailin Peng; Zhongfan Liu; Hongqi Xu
Graphitic nitrogen-doped graphene is an excellent platform to study scattering processes of massless Dirac Fermions by charged impurities, in which high mobility can be preserved due to the absence of lattice defects through direct substitution of carbon atoms in the graphene lattice by nitrogen atoms. In this work, we report on electrical and magnetotransport measurements of high-quality graphitic nitrogen-doped graphene. We show that the substitutional nitrogen dopants in graphene introduce atomically sharp scatters for electrons but long-range Coulomb scatters for holes and, thus, graphitic nitrogen-doped graphene exhibits clear electron-hole asymmetry in transport properties. Dominant scattering processes of charge carriers in graphitic nitrogen-doped graphene are analyzed. It is shown that the electron-hole asymmetry originates from a distinct difference in intervalley scattering of electrons and holes. We have also carried out the magnetotransport measurements of graphitic nitrogen-doped graphene at different temperatures and the temperature dependences of intervalley scattering, intravalley scattering, and phase coherent scattering rates are extracted and discussed. Our results provide an evidence for the electron-hole asymmetry in the intervalley scattering induced by substitutional nitrogen dopants in graphene and shine a light on versatile and potential applications of graphitic nitrogen-doped graphene in electronic and valleytronic devices.