Graphene/Strontium Titanate: Approaching Single Crystal–Like Charge Transport in Polycrystalline Oxide Perovskite Nanocomposites through Grain Boundary Engineering

Yue Lin, Maxwell Thomas Dylla, Jimmy Jiahong Kuo, James Patrick Male, Ian Anthony Kinloch, Robert Freer, Gerald Jeffery Snyder

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Grain boundaries critically limit the electronic performance of oxide perovskites. These interfaces lower the carrier mobilities of polycrystalline materials by several orders of magnitude compared to single crystals. Despite extensive effort, improving the mobility of polycrystalline materials (to meet the performance of single crystals) is still a severe challenge. In this work, the grain boundary effect is eliminated in perovskite strontium titanate (STO) by incorporating graphene into the polycrystalline microstructure. An effective mass model provides strong evidence that polycrystalline graphene/strontium titanate (G/STO) nanocomposites approach single crystal-like charge transport. This phenomenological model reduces the complexity of analyzing charge transport properties so that a quantitative comparison can be made between the nanocomposites and STO single crystals. In other related works, graphene composites also optimize the thermal transport properties of thermoelectric materials. Therefore, decorating grain boundaries with graphene appears to be a robust strategy to achieve “phonon glass–electron crystal” behavior in oxide perovskites.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1910079
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
Early online date3 Feb 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • charge transport
  • grain boundary engineering
  • graphene
  • nanocomposites
  • oxide perovskites

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