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Dive into the research topics where Vidya Kochat is active.

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Featured researches published by Vidya Kochat.


ACS Nano | 2011

Microscopic Mechanism of 1/f Noise in Graphene: Role of Energy Band Dispersion

Atindra Nath Pal; Subhamoy Ghatak; Vidya Kochat; E. S. Sneha; Arjun Sampathkumar; Srinivasan Raghavan; Arindam Ghosh

A distinctive feature of single-layer graphene is the linearly dispersive energy bands, which in the case of multilayer graphene become parabolic. A simple electrical transport-based probe to differentiate between these two band structures will be immensely valuable, particularly when quantum Hall measurements are difficult, such as in chemically synthesized graphene nanoribbons. Here we show that the flicker noise, or the 1/f noise, in electrical resistance is a sensitive and robust probe to the band structure of graphene. At low temperatures, the dependence of noise magnitude on the carrier density was found to be opposite for the linear and parabolic bands. We explain our data with a comprehensive theoretical model that clarifies several puzzling issues concerning the microscopic origin of flicker noise in graphene field-effect transistors (GraFET).


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

High contrast imaging and thickness determination of graphene with in-column secondary electron microscopy

Vidya Kochat; Atindra Nath Pal; E. S. Sneha; Arjun Sampathkumar; Anshita Gairola; S. A. Shivashankar; Srinivasan Raghavan; Arindam Ghosh

We report a new method for quantitative estimation of graphene layer thicknesses using high contrast imaging of graphene films on insulating substrates with a scanning electron microscope. By detecting the attenuation of secondary electrons emitted from the substrate with an in-column low-energy electron detector, we have achieved very high thickness-dependent contrast that allows quantitative estimation of thickness up to several graphene layers. The nanometer scale spatial resolution of the electron micrographs also allows a simple structural characterization scheme for graphene, which has been applied to identify faults, wrinkles, voids, and patches of multilayer growth in large-area chemical vapor deposited graphene. We have discussed the factors, such as differential surface charging and electron beam induced current, that affect the contrast of graphene images in detail.


Nano Letters | 2016

Magnitude and Origin of Electrical Noise at Individual Grain Boundaries in Graphene

Vidya Kochat; Chandra Sekhar Tiwary; Tathagata Biswas; Gopalakrishnan Ramalingam; Kimberly Hsieh; K. Chattopadhyay; Srinivasan Raghavan; Manish Jain; Arindam Ghosh

Grain boundaries (GBs) are undesired in large area layered 2D materials as they degrade the device quality and their electronic performance. Here we show that the grain boundaries in graphene which induce additional scattering of carriers in the conduction channel also act as an additional and strong source of electrical noise especially at the room temperature. From graphene field effect transistors consisting of single GB, we find that the electrical noise across the graphene GBs can be nearly 10 000 times larger than the noise from equivalent dimensions in single crystalline graphene. At high carrier densities (n), the noise magnitude across the GBs decreases as ∝1/n, suggesting Hooge-type mobility fluctuations, whereas at low n close to the Dirac point, the noise magnitude could be quantitatively described by the fluctuations in the number of propagating modes across the GB.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Quaternary 2D Transition Metal Dichalcogenides (TMDs) with Tunable Bandgap

Sandhya Susarla; Alex Kutana; Jordan A. Hachtel; Vidya Kochat; Amey Apte; Robert Vajtai; Juan Carlos Idrobo; Boris I. Yakobson; Chandra Sekhar Tiwary; Pulickel M. Ajayan

Alloying/doping in 2D material is important due to wide range bandgap tunability. Increasing the number of components would increase the degree of freedom which can provide more flexibility in tuning the bandgap and also reduces the growth temperature. Here, synthesis of quaternary alloys Mox W1-x S2y Se2(1-y) is reported using chemical vapor deposition. The composition of alloys is tuned by changing the growth temperatures. As a result, the bandgap can be tuned which varies from 1.61 to 1.85 eV. The detailed theoretical calculation supports the experimental observation and shows a possibility of wide tunability of bandgap.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Re Doping in 2D Transition Metal Dichalcogenides as a New Route to Tailor Structural Phases and Induced Magnetism

Vidya Kochat; Amey Apte; Jordan A. Hachtel; Hiroyuki Kumazoe; Aravind Krishnamoorthy; Sandhya Susarla; Juan Carlos Idrobo; Fuyuki Shimojo; Priya Vashishta; Rajiv K. Kalia; Aiichiro Nakano; Chandra Sekhar Tiwary; Pulickel M. Ajayan

Alloying in 2D results in the development of new, diverse, and versatile systems with prospects in bandgap engineering, catalysis, and energy storage. Tailoring structural phase transitions using alloying is a novel idea with implications in designing all 2D device architecture as the structural phases in 2D materials such as transition metal dichalcogenides are correlated with electronic phases. Here, this study develops a new growth strategy employing chemical vapor deposition to grow monolayer 2D alloys of Re-doped MoSe2 with show composition tunable structural phase variations. The compositions where the phase transition is observed agree well with the theoretical predictions for these 2D systems. It is also shown that in addition to the predicted new electronic phases, these systems also provide opportunities to study novel phenomena such as magnetism which broadens the range of their applications.


Science Advances | 2017

Fluorinated h-BN as a magnetic semiconductor

Sruthi Radhakrishnan; Deya Das; Atanu Samanta; Carlos A. de los Reyes; Liangzi Deng; Lawrence B. Alemany; Thomas K. Weldeghiorghis; Valery N. Khabashesku; Vidya Kochat; Zehua Jin; Parambath M. Sudeep; Angel A. Martí; Ching-Wu Chu; Ajit K. Roy; Chandra Sekhar Tiwary; Abhishek K. Singh; Pulickel M. Ajayan

A strategic approach toward functionalization can change properties: effect of the “oxidizer of oxygen” on hexagonal boron nitride. We report the fluorination of electrically insulating hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) and the subsequent modification of its electronic band structure to a wide bandgap semiconductor via introduction of defect levels. The electrophilic nature of fluorine causes changes in the charge distribution around neighboring nitrogen atoms in h-BN, leading to room temperature weak ferromagnetism. The observations are further supported by theoretical calculations considering various possible configurations of fluorinated h-BN structure and their energy states. This unconventional magnetic semiconductor material could spur studies of stable two-dimensional magnetic semiconductors. Although the high thermal and chemical stability of h-BN have found a variety of uses, this chemical functionalization approach expands its functionality to electronic and magnetic devices.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Fermi-edge transmission resonance in graphene driven by a single Coulomb impurity.

Paritosh Karnatak; Srijit Goswami; Vidya Kochat; Atindra Nath Pal; Arindam Ghosh

The interaction between the Fermi sea of conduction electrons and a nonadiabatic attractive impurity potential can lead to a power-law divergence in the tunneling probability of charge through the impurity. The resulting effect, known as the Fermi edge singularity (FES), constitutes one of the most fundamental many-body phenomena in quantum solid state physics. Here we report the first observation of FES for Dirac fermions in graphene driven by isolated Coulomb impurities in the conduction channel. In high-mobility graphene devices on hexagonal boron nitride substrates, the FES manifests in abrupt changes in conductance with a large magnitude ≈e(2)/h at resonance, indicating total many-body screening of a local Coulomb impurity with fluctuating charge occupancy. Furthermore, we exploit the extreme sensitivity of graphene to individual Coulomb impurities and demonstrate a new defect-spectroscopy tool to investigate strongly correlated phases in graphene in the quantum Hall regime.


Nano Letters | 2017

Effect of Carrier Localization on Electrical Transport and Noise at Individual Grain Boundaries in Monolayer MoS2

Kimberly Hsieh; Vidya Kochat; Xiang Zhang; Yongji Gong; Chandra Sekhar Tiwary; Pulickel M. Ajayan; Arindam Ghosh

Despite its importance in the large-scale synthesis of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDC) molecular layers, the generic quantum effects on electrical transport across individual grain boundaries (GBs) in TMDC monolayers remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that strong carrier localization due to the increased density of defects determines both temperature dependence of electrical transport and low-frequency noise at the GBs of chemical vapor deposition (CVD)-grown MoS2 layers. Using field effect devices designed to explore transport across individual GBs, we show that the localization length of electrons in the GB region is ∼30-70% lower than that within the grain, even though the room temperature conductance across the GB, oriented perpendicular to the overall flow of current, may be lower or higher than the intragrain region. Remarkably, we find that the stronger localization is accompanied by nearly 5 orders of magnitude enhancement in the low-frequency noise at the GB region, which increases exponentially when the temperature is reduced. The microscopic framework of electrical transport and noise developed in this paper may be readily extended to other strongly localized two-dimensional systems, including other members of the TMDC family.


Science Advances | 2018

Atomically thin gallium layers from solid-melt exfoliation

Vidya Kochat; Atanu Samanta; Yuan Zhang; Sanjit Bhowmick; Praveena Manimunda; S. A. Syed Asif; Anthony S. Stender; Robert Vajtai; Abhishek K. Singh; Chandra Sekhar Tiwary; Pulickel M. Ajayan

A unique way to synthesize innovative 2D gallenene. Among the large number of promising two-dimensional (2D) atomic layer crystals, true metallic layers are rare. Using combined theoretical and experimental approaches, we report on the stability and successful exfoliation of atomically thin “gallenene” sheets on a silicon substrate, which has two distinct atomic arrangements along crystallographic twin directions of the parent α-gallium. With a weak interface between solid and molten phases of gallium, a solid-melt interface exfoliation technique is developed to extract these layers. Phonon dispersion calculations show that gallenene can be stabilized with bulk gallium lattice parameters. The electronic band structure of gallenene shows a combination of partially filled Dirac cone and the nonlinear dispersive band near the Fermi level, suggesting that gallenene should behave as a metallic layer. Furthermore, it is observed that the strong interaction of gallenene with other 2D semiconductors induces semiconducting to metallic phase transitions in the latter, paving the way for using gallenene as promising metallic contacts in 2D devices.


Iet Circuits Devices & Systems | 2015

Origin of 1/f noise in graphene produced for large-scale applications in electronics

Vidya Kochat; Anindita Sahoo; Atindra Nath Pal; Sneha Eashwer; Gopalakrishnan Ramalingam; Arjun Sampathkumar; Ryugu Tero; Tran Viet Thu; Sanjeev Kaushal; Hiroshi Okada; Adarsh Sandhu; Srinivasan Raghavan; Arindam Ghosh

The authors report a detailed investigation of the flicker noise (1/f noise) in graphene films obtained from chemical vapour deposition (CVD) and chemical reduction of graphene oxide. The authors find that in the case of polycrystalline graphene films grown by CVD, the grain boundaries and other structural defects are the dominant source of noise by acting as charged trap centres resulting in huge increase in noise as compared with that of exfoliated graphene. A study of the kinetics of defects in hydrazine-reduced graphene oxide (RGO) films as a function of the extent of reduction showed that for longer hydrazine treatment time strong localised crystal defects are introduced in RGO, whereas the RGO with shorter hydrazine treatment showed the presence of large number of mobile defects leading to higher noise amplitude.

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Chandra Sekhar Tiwary

Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar

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Arindam Ghosh

Indian Institute of Science

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Jordan A. Hachtel

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Juan Carlos Idrobo

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Aiichiro Nakano

University of Southern California

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Priya Vashishta

University of Southern California

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