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Title [sv]
Ultrathin flexible materials for a battery-less, sustainable, and environment friendly smart society
Title [en]
Ultratunna¬†flexibla materials för ett batterilöst, hållbart och miljövänligt smart samhälle
Abstract [sv]
Today, batteries power up mobile devices, sensors, electric vehicles, and residential/industrial power backup facilities. However, batteries contain toxic metals, rare materials, and the expensive metal Co, which involves children mining under hazardous conditions. Moreover, there are cumulative effects of producing, disposing or recycling batteries to environmental pollution, including fire-hazard and safety issues. By 2050, the global sensor network of the internet of things (IoT) consisting of healthcare, wearable smart devices to earthquake warning systems, is expected to surpass 1 trillion sensors. Thus, there is a serious need to develop new materials for safer self-powered technologies that can operate by harnessing renewable energy. The goal here is to develop ultrathin materials of high-quality scalable laminates by stacking multiple sheets of atomically thin graphene and graphene-like other crystals, composed of the naturally abundant elements, carbon, boron, and nitrogen. We will use such sheets to create novel energy generators harvesting mechanical and natural motions and special high-density dry ultracapacitors for energy storage. These key innovations will pave the way for alternative environmentally safe technologies for reducing greenhouse gas emission and enabling battery-less electronics for a sustainable and smart society. The project will be conducted at the Ångström laboratory with state-of-the-art material processing and characterization tools.
Abstract [en]
Idag driver batterier mobil teknik, sensorer, elfordon och reservkraft för bostads/industrifastigheter. Batterier innehåller emellertid giftiga metaller, sällsynta ämnen och den dyra metallen kobolt, vars brytning involverar barnarbete under farliga förhållanden. Dessutom finns det kumulativa effekter av att producera, slänga och återvinna batterier för miljöföroreningar, inkluderat brandfara och säkerhetsproblem. År 2050 förväntas det globala sensornätverket för internet of things (IoT), vilket bland annat består av sensorer för hälso- och sjukvård, bärbara smarta enheter och jordbävningsvarnare, överstiga 1 biljon sensorer. Det finns alltså ett stort behov av att utveckla nya material för säkrare självdrivna tekniker som använder förnybar energi. Målet är att utveckla ultratunna material av högkvalitativa skalbara laminat genom att stapla flera ark av atomiskt tunna grafen och grafenliknande kristaller, dessa består av de naturligt förekommande grundämnena kol, bor och kväve. Vi kommer att använda sådana ark för att skapa nya generatorer, som utnyttjar mekaniska och naturliga förkommande rörelser, och nya, torra, ultralkondensaatorer med hög densitet för energilagring. Dessa innovationer kommer att bana väg för ny miljövänlig teknologi som minskar utsläppen av växthusgaser och möjliggör batterilös elektronik för ett hållbart och smart samhälle. Projektet kommer att genomföras på Ångströmlaboratoriet och med dess toppmoderna materialbearbetnings- och karaktäriseringsverktyg.
Publications (2 of 2) Show all publications
Belotcerkovtceva, D., Datt, G., Nameirakpam, H., Aitkulova, A., Suntornwipat, N., Majdi, S., . . . Kamalakar, M. V. (2025). Extreme Current Density and Breakdown Mechanism in Graphene on Diamond Substrate. Carbon, 237, Article ID 120108.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Extreme Current Density and Breakdown Mechanism in Graphene on Diamond Substrate
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2025 (English)In: Carbon, ISSN 0008-6223, E-ISSN 1873-3891, Vol. 237, article id 120108Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The high current-carrying capacity of graphene is essential for its use as an interconnect in electronic and spintronic circuits. At the same time, knowing the breakdown limits and mechanism under high fields can enable new device design strategies. In this work, we push the current carrying capacity of the scalable form of chemical vapor deposited (CVD) graphene employing a high-thermal conducting single crystalline diamond substrate. Our experiments on CVD graphene reveal extremely high current densities > 109 A/cm2 in graphene on the diamond with both ohmic (low-resistive) and tunneling tunnel (high-resistive) contacts. Measurements on ferromagnetic (TiOx/Co) and metallic (Ti/Au) contacts demonstrate current densities of ∼1.16×109 A/cm2 and ∼1.7×109 A/cm2, respectively. The tunnel (high-resistive) contacts exhibit a shunting of graphene under high currents via the bottom graphitized diamond, resulting in dielectric breakdown and via alternative conducting paths. Electrical measurements show a distinct threshold for conducting paths of graphitized diamond, in tune accordance with Middleton-Wingreen's theory. Our results of high current densities achieved in CVD graphene, with distinct dependence on ohmic and tunneling, contact resistance, and the observed breakdown mechanism, provide new insights for enabling high-current all carbon circuits.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier, 2025
Keywords
CVD Graphene, diamond, high current carrying capacity, fractal pattern
National Category
Condensed Matter Physics
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-550657 (URN)10.1016/j.carbon.2025.120108 (DOI)001460969300001 ()2-s2.0-85218100128 (Scopus ID)
Funder
EU, European Research Council, 101002772Olle Engkvists stiftelse, 200–0602Swedish Energy Agency, 48698-1Swedish Energy Agency, 48591-1Swedish Research Council, 2021-05932Swedish Research Council, 22-04186-5Swedish Research Council Formas, 2019-01326Swedish Research Council Formas, 2023-01607Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, 2022.0079
Available from: 2025-02-17 Created: 2025-02-17 Last updated: 2025-11-20Bibliographically approved
Belotcerkovtceva, D., Nameirakpam, H., Datt, G., Noumbe, U. & Kamalakar, M. V. (2024). High current treated-passivated graphene (CTPG) towards stable nanoelectronic and spintronic circuits. Nanoscale Horizons, 9(3), 456-464
Open this publication in new window or tab >>High current treated-passivated graphene (CTPG) towards stable nanoelectronic and spintronic circuits
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2024 (English)In: Nanoscale Horizons, ISSN 2055-6764, E-ISSN 2055-6756, Vol. 9, no 3, p. 456-464Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Achieving enhanced and stable electrical quality of scalable graphene is crucial for practical graphene device applications. Accordingly, encapsulation has emerged as an approach for improving electrical transport in graphene. In this study, we demonstrate high-current treatment of graphene passivated by AlOx nanofilms as a new means to enhance the electrical quality of graphene for its scalable utilization. Our experiments and electrical measurements on large-scale chemical vapor-deposited (CVD) graphene devices reveal that high-current treatment causes persistent and irreversible de-trapping density in both bare graphene and graphene covered by AlOx. Strikingly, despite possible interfacial defects in graphene covered with AlOx, the high-current treatment enhances its carrier mobility by up to 200% in contrast to bare graphene samples, where mobility decreases. Spatially resolved Raman spectroscopy mapping confirms that surface passivation by AlOx, followed by the current treatment, reduces the number of sp3 defects in graphene. These results suggest that for current treated-passivated graphene (CTPG), the high-current treatment considerably reduces charged impurity and trapped charge densities, thereby reducing Coulomb scattering while mitigating any electromigration of carbon atoms. Our study unveils CTPG as an innovative system for practical utilization in graphene nanoelectronic and spintronic integrated circuits.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Royal Society of Chemistry, 2024
National Category
Condensed Matter Physics
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-526688 (URN)10.1039/d3nh00338h (DOI)001140998600001 ()2-s2.0-85182721062 (Scopus ID)
Funder
Swedish Research Council, 2021-05932Swedish Energy Agency, 48698–1Swedish Research Council Formas, 2019–01326Olle Engkvists stiftelse, 200–0602EU, European Research Council, Project SPINNER
Available from: 2024-04-15 Created: 2024-04-15 Last updated: 2025-02-18Bibliographically approved
Coordinating organisation
Uppsala University
Funder
Period
2020-01-01 - 2022-12-31
National Category
Composite Science and Engineering
Identifiers
DiVA, id: project:6438Project, id: 2019-01326_Formas

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