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Dive into the research topics where S.H. M Jafri is active.

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Featured researches published by S.H. M Jafri.


Journal of Physics D | 2010

Conductivity engineering of graphene by defect formation

S.H. M Jafri; Karel Carva; Erika Widenkvist; Tobias Blom; Biplab Sanyal; Jonas Fransson; Olle Eriksson; Ulf Jansson; Helena Grennberg; Olof Karis; Ronald A. Quinlan; Brian C. Holloway; Klaus Leifer

Transport measurements have revealed several exotic electronic properties of graphene. The possibility to influence the electronic structure and hence control the conductivity by adsorption or doping with adatoms is crucial in view of electronics applications. Here, we show that in contrast to expectation, the conductivity of graphene increases with increasing concentration of vacancy defects, by more than one order of magnitude. We obtain a pronounced enhancement of the conductivity after insertion of defects by both quantum mechanical transport calculations as well as experimental studies of carbon nano-sheets. Our finding is attributed to the defect induced mid-gap states, which create a region exhibiting metallic behaviour around the vacancy defects. The modification of the conductivity of graphene by the implementation of stable defects is crucial for the creation of electronic junctions in graphene-based electronics devices.


Nanotechnology | 2012

Improved gas sensing activity in structurally defected bilayer graphene

Y Hajati; Tobias Blom; S.H. M Jafri; Soumyajyoti Haldar; Sumanta Bhandary; M Z Shoushtari; Olle Eriksson; Biplab Sanyal; Klaus Leifer

Graphene is a two-dimensional material with a capability of gas sensing, which is here shown to be drastically improved by inducing gentle disorder in the lattice. We report that by using a focused ion beam technique, controlled disorder can be introduced into the graphene structure through Ga(+) ion irradiation. This disorder leads to an increase in the electrical response of graphene to NO(2) gas molecules by a factor of three in an ambient environment (air). Ab initio density functional calculations indicate that NO(2) molecules bind strongly to Stone-Wales defects, where they modify electronic states close to the Fermi level, which in turn influence the transport properties. The demonstrated gas sensor, utilizing structurally defected graphene, shows faster response, higher conductivity changes and thus higher sensitivity to NO(2) as compared to pristine graphene.


Nanotechnology | 2010

Assessment of a nanoparticle bridge platform for molecular electronics measurements

S.H. M Jafri; Tobias Blom; Klaus Leifer; Maria Strømme; Henrik Löfås; Anton Grigoriev; Rajeev Ahuja; Ken Welch

A combination of electron beam lithography, photolithography and focused ion beam milling was used to create a nanogap platform, which was bridged by gold nanoparticles in order to make electrical measurements and assess the platform under ambient conditions. Non-functionalized electrodes were tested to determine the intrinsic response of the platform and it was found that creating devices in ambient conditions requires careful cleaning and awareness of the contributions contaminants may make to measurements. The platform was then used to make measurements on octanethiol (OT) and biphenyldithiol (BPDT) molecules by functionalizing the nanoelectrodes with the molecules prior to bridging the nanogap with nanoparticles. Measurements on OT show that it is possible to make measurements on relatively small numbers of molecules, but that a large variation in response can be expected when one of the metal-molecule junctions is physisorbed, which was partially explained by attachment of OT molecules to different sites on the surface of the Au electrode using a density functional theory calculation. On the other hand, when dealing with BPDT, high yields for device creation are very difficult to achieve under ambient conditions. Significant hysteresis in the I-V curves of BPDT was also observed, which was attributed primarily to voltage induced changes at the interface between the molecule and the metal.


Nanoscale | 2013

Identification of vibrational signatures from short chains of interlinked molecule–nanoparticle junctions obtained by inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy

S.H. M Jafri; Henrik Löfås; Jonas Fransson; Tobias Blom; Anton Grigoriev; Andreas Wallner; Rajeev Ahuja; Henrik Ottosson; Klaus Leifer

Short chains containing a series of metal-molecule-nanoparticle nanojunctions are a nano-material system with the potential to give electrical signatures close to those from single molecule experiments while enabling us to build portable devices on a chip. Inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy (IETS) measurements provide one of the most characteristic electrical signals of single and few molecules. In interlinked molecule-nanoparticle (NP) chains containing typically 5-7 molecules in a chain, the spectrum is expected to be a superposition of the vibrational signatures of individual molecules. We have established a stable and reproducible molecule-AuNP multi-junction by placing a few 1,8-octanedithiol (ODT) molecules onto a versatile and portable nanoparticle-nanoelectrode platform and measured for the first time vibrational molecular signatures at complex and coupled few-molecule-NP junctions. From quantum transport calculations, we model the IETS spectra and identify vibrational modes as well as the number of molecules contributing to the electron transport in the measured spectra.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2012

Nanoparticle Bridges for Studying Electrical Properties of Organic Molecules

Klaus Leifer; Ken Welch; S.H. M Jafri; Tobias Blom

The use of single molecules as building blocks for practical electronic devices and sensors has high potential for novel applications due to the versatility of electronic properties of the molecules. Nano-sized molecules offer great potential for further miniaturization of electronic devices. We describe a method where such molecules are used to bridge a nanoparticles-nanoelectrode interface and thus determine the electrical properties of such a junction. We describe in detail the fabrication of the platform, its functionalization with molecules, and the basics of the electrical measurements. This platform has been shown to guide electrical current through a few molecules. The versatility of such nanoparticle-molecule-nanoelectrode heterojunctions makes this platform suitable for both basic molecular electronics measurements and also for molecular sensing devices in biological and medical applications.


Journal of Nanoparticle Research | 2014

Stability optimisation of molecular electronic devices based on nanoelectrode–nanoparticle bridge platform in air and different storage liquids

S.H. M Jafri; Tobias Blom; Andreas Wallner; Henrik Ottosson; Klaus Leifer


European Conference on Molecular Electronics (ECME) 2015 | 2015

Synthesis of nanoscale electronic device by molecular place exchange reaction in the nanoparticle nanoelectrode bridge platform. : Synthesis of nanoscale electronic device by molecular place exchange reaction in the nanoparticle-nanoelectrodebridge platform

Ishtiaq Hassan Wani; S.H. M Jafri; Andreas Orthaber; Klaus Leifer; Anton Grigoriev


2nd European Conference on Smart Inorganic Polymers | 2015

Fabrication of reproducible sub-5 nm nanogaps by a focused ion beam and application in electrical characterization of single molecules

Hu Li; Ishtiaq Hassan Wani; Aqib Hayat; S.H. M Jafri; Klaus Leifer


International conference on impact of Nano-science on energy technologies (NanoSET-2014) | 2014

Piezoelectricity and photoconductivity in single or few Zinc Oxide nanorods

S.H. M Jafri; Klaus Leifer


Archive | 2011

Fabrication and characterization of high resistance sub-5 nm gaps made by electrodeposition of gold in 30 nm gaps cut by using a focused gallium ion beam

Tobias Blom; S.H. M Jafri; N. Körber; Klaus Leifer

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