Abstract

Materials with tunable negative electromagnetic performance, i.e., where dielectric permittivity becomes negative, have long been pursued in materials research due to their peculiar electromagnetic (EM) characteristics. Here, this promising feature is reported in materials on the case of plasma-synthesized nitrogen-doped graphene sheets with tunable permittivity over a wide (1-40GHz) frequency range. Selectively incorporated nitrogen atoms in a graphene scaffold tailor the electronic structure in a way that provides an ultra-low energy (0.5-2eV) 2D surface plasmon excitation, leading to subunitary and negative dielectric constant values in the Ka-band, from 30 up to 40GHz. By allowing the tailoring of structures at atomic scale, this novel plasma-based approach creates a new paradigm for designing 2D nanomaterials like nanocarbons with controllable and tunable permittivity, opening a path to the next generation of 2D metamaterials.

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