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Graphene on ferroelectric structures can be promising candidates for advanced field effect transistors, modulators and electrical transducers, providing that research of their electrotransport and electromechanical performances can be lifted up from mostly empirical to prognostic theoretical level.Recently we have shown that alternating piezoelectric displacement of the ferroelectric domain surfaces can lead to the alternate stretching and separation of graphene areas at the steps between elongated and contracted domains, and the conductance of graphene channel can be increased essentially at room temperature, because electrons in the stretched section scatter on acoustic phonons.The piezoelectric mechanism of graphene conductance control requires systematic studies of the ambient condition impact on its manifestations. This theoretical work studies in details the temperature behavior of the graphene conductance changes induced by piezoelectric effect in a ferroelectric substrate with domain stripes.We revealed the possibility to control graphene conductance (that can change up to 100 times for PZT ferroelectric substrate) by tuning the ambient temperature from low values to the critical one for given gate voltage and channel length.Also we demonstrate the possibility to control graphene conductance changes up to one hundred of times by tuning the gate voltage from 0 to the critical value at a given temperature and channel length. Obtained results can be open the way towards graphene on ferroelectric applications in piezoresistive memories operating in a wide temperature range.
In-plane optical anisotropy has been detected from monolayer MoS$_2$ grown on a-plane (11-20) sapphire substrate in the ultraviolet-visible wavelength range. Based on the measured optical anisotropy, the energy differences between the optical transit
Structural and superconducting properties of high quality Niobium nanofilms with different thicknesses are investigated on silicon oxide and sapphire substrates. The role played by the different substrates and the superconducting properties of the Nb
Here we investigate the temperature dependence of anomalous Hall effect in Hf/GdFeCo/MgO sheet film and Hall bar device. The magnetic compensation temperature ($T_{comp}$) for the sheet film and device is found to be ~240 K and ~118 K, respectively.
Ferroelectric field-effect transistors employ a ferroelectric material as a gate insulator, the polarization state of which can be detected using the channel conductance of the device. As a result, the devices are of potential to use in non-volatile
We report on experimental studies of terahertz (THz) radiation transmission through grating-gate graphene-channel transistor nanostructures and demonstrate room temperature THz radiation amplification stimulated by current-driven plasmon excitations.