Graphene – from a wonder material to the application in mobile communication

25-Mar-2015 - Germany

Its theoretical properties made graphene a »wonder material« overnight: it is up to 200 times harder than steel, six times lighter, strong but flexible, environmentally friendly and the world’s thinnest material. Measuring only a single atom layer, about a one hundred-thousandth the diameter of a human hair, it still retains a remarkable level of conductivity. At the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State Physics IAF, these properties will be put to practice: as a nearly massless electrode for piezoelectric resonators, as used in bandpass filters of smartphones.

© Fraunhofer IAF

The new CVD-reactor »Black Magic« for the deposition of graphene at Fraunhofer IAF. In future, a cost-efficient and simplified technology will make the deposition and the transfer of graphene onto aluminum-nitride-based bandpass filters possible.

© Fraunhofer IAF

View into the process chamber of the reactor, where graphene is grown on a catalyst surface which reaches up to 1000 °C.

© Fraunhofer IAF
© Fraunhofer IAF

GSM, UMTS, LTE, WiFi, Bluetooth – to name just a few of the wireless standards that have become a natural part of mobile communication today. For all these wireless standards, signal processing could not be done without the filtering of frequencies. Micro-acoustic piezoelectric resonators are the dominant technology in the market for this purpose. Theory predicts excellent oscillation characteristics for these resonators, if  the electrode used for the excitation of the oscillation becomes very light. And the lightest conceivable electrode is electrically conductive graphene.

»The metal electrodes, commonly used today, dampen the oscillation of the resonators through their mass – similar to the felt cover on a piano string – and therefore reduce the precision of signal separation in bandpass filters. While the metal electrodes cannot be arbitrarily thinned to reduce their mass and thus their damping, graphene still remains conductive even as an atomically thin electrode.«, explains Dr. René Hoffmann, head of graphene research at Fraunhofer IAF. With such thin graphene electrodes, the mechanical quality factors come close to the theoretical ideal. If the oscillation characteristics of the piezoelectric resonators can be successfully improved and if higher coupling factors are achieved, both the signal separation precision and the energy efficiency of the filters will increase. Here, the challenge at hand is to connect the nearly massless graphene electrodes with the currently used mobile communication components based on piezoelectric aluminum nitride.

Industry compatible graphene deposition technologies

As one of the partners in the »Graphene Flagship«, the largest funding initiative in the history of the European Union, Fraunhofer IAF is working on the development of an efficient technology for graphene deposition and graphene transfer onto aluminum nitride. As surprising as it may be to be able to manufacture and process graphene as atomically thin material at all – it is just as difficult to do so on an industrial scale. Many of the possible applications of graphene have not yet been successful since the production of the material is still too complex. Hence, the development of economical manufacturing and processing technologies is essential for the use of the outstanding theoretical properties of graphene in practice.

A promising approach for the realization of graphene deposition on substrate sizes typical for the semiconductor industry can be found in chemical vapor deposition. Here, a catalyst surface such as copper is heated to nearly 1000 °C until gas containing carbon is broken down on the hot surface and reorganized into graphene. In future, this method is supposed to be further developed into a technology compatible for industry applications, to directly integrate graphene into existing aluminum-niride-based bandpass filters.

About the »Graphene Flagship«

Besides Fraunhofer IAF, two other Fraunhofer Institutes are aboard the »Graphene Flagship«, which includes 142 organizations from 23 countries: the Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI, as well as the Fraunhofer Institute for Chemical Technology ICT. Researchers at Fraunhofer ICT are working on a further large-scale and cost-efficient production method for graphene – in form of graphene flakes. The graphene-experts of the Fraunhofer ISI, on the other hand, develop strategic technology- and application-roadmaps for all partners of the consortium and the entire graphene-community. The roadmaps serve the improved assessment of important graphene-driver-units for the continuing graphene developments as well as application fields in the future. Additionally, Dr. Thomas Reiß, head of the Competence Center New Technologies at Fraunhofer ISI, was elected member of the Executive Board of the »Graphene Flagship«.

In order to make graphene accessible for the European market, the European Union is promoting universities, research institutions and businesses with an overall funding budget of one billion Euros.

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