Probing charge scattering mechanisms in suspended graphene by varying its dielectric environment
A. K. M. Newaz, Yevgeniy S. Puzyrev, Bin Wang, Sokrates T. Pantelides,, and Kirill I. Bolotin

TL;DR
This study investigates how the dielectric environment affects charge scattering in suspended graphene, revealing that non-polar liquids enhance mobility by screening impurities, while polar liquids suppress it due to charged ions, and liquids also reduce phonon scattering.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence on how dielectric environment influences charge scattering mechanisms in suspended graphene, highlighting the role of liquid polarity and dielectric constant.
Findings
High-5 ext{ } ext{dielectric} ext{ } ext{constant} ext{ } ext{liquids} ext{ } ext{increase} ext{ } ext{mobility}
Polar liquids with high 5 ext{ } ext{cause} ext{ } ext{mobility} ext{ } ext{drop}
Liquids suppress out-of-plane flexural phonons, reducing scattering
Abstract
Graphene with high carrier mobility \mu\ is required both for graphene-based electronic devices and for the investigation of the fundamental properties of graphene's Dirac fermions. It is largely accepted that the mobility-limiting factor in graphene is the Coulomb scattering off of charged impurities that reside either on graphene or in the underlying substrate. This is true both for traditional graphene devices on SiO2 substrates and possibly for the recently reported high-mobility suspended and supported devices. An attractive approach to reduce such scattering is to place graphene in an environment with high static dielectric constant \kappa\ that would effectively screen the electric field due to the impurities. However, experiments so far report only a modest effect of high-\kappa\ environment on mobility. Here, we investigate the effect of the dielectric environment of graphene…
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