Abstract

The addition of nitrogen as a dopant in monolayer graphene is a flexible approach to tune the electronic properties of graphene as required for applications. Here, we investigate the impact of the doping process that adds N dopants and defects on the key electronic properties, such as the mobility, the effective mass, the Berry phase, and the scattering times of the charge carriers. Measurements at low temperatures and magnetic fields up to 9 T show a decrease of the mobility with increasing defect density due to elastic, short-range scattering. At low magnetic fields weak localization indicates an inelastic contribution depending on both defects and dopants. Analysis of the effective mass shows that the N dopants decrease the slope of the linear bands, which are characteristic for the band structure of graphene around the Dirac point. The Berry phase, however, remains unaffected by the modifications induced through defects and dopants, showing that the overall band structure of the samples is still exhibiting the key properties as expected for Dirac fermions in graphene.

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