Tunable Hybridization Between Electronic States of Graphene and Physisorbed Hexacene
Yuefeng Yin, Jiri Cervenka, Nikhil V. Medhekar

TL;DR
This study explores how physisorbed hexacene molecules can modify graphene's electronic properties, enabling tunable band gaps and localized states without significant doping, using first principles calculations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that long-chain acenes can be non-covalently adsorbed on bilayer graphene to tune its electronic structure via external electric fields.
Findings
Adsorption creates localized states near graphene's Fermi level.
External electric fields can induce band gaps up to 250 meV.
Charge redistribution is weak enough to avoid strong doping.
Abstract
Non-covalent functionalization via physisorption of organic molecules provides a scalable approach for modifying the electronic structure of graphene while preserving its excellent carrier mobilities. Here we investigated the physisorption of long-chain acenes, namely, hexacene and its fluorinated derivative perfluorohexacene, on bilayer graphene for tunable graphene devices using first principles methods. We find that the adsorption of these molecules leads to the formation of localized states in the electronic structure of graphene close to its Fermi level, which could be readily tuned by an external electric field. The electric field not only creates a variable band gap as large as 250 meV in bilayer graphene, but also strongly influences the charge redistribution within the molecule-graphene system. This charge redistribution is found to be weak enough not to induce strong surface…
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