| Literature DB >> 23016137 |
Carla Bittencourt1, Adam P Hitchock, Xiaoxing Ke, Gustaaf Van Tendeloo, Chris P Ewels, Peter Guttmann.
Abstract
We demonstrate that near-edge X-ray-absorption fine-structure spectra combined with full-field transmission X-ray microscopy can be used to study the electronic structure of graphite flakes consisting of a few graphene layers. The flake was produced by exfoliation using sodium cholate and then isolated by means of density-gradient ultracentrifugation. An image sequence around the carbon K-edge, analyzed by using reference spectra for the in-plane and out-of-plane regions of the sample, is used to map and spectrally characterize the flat and folded regions of the flake. Additional spectral features in both π and σ regions are observed, which may be related to the presence of topological defects. Doping by metal impurities that were present in the original exfoliated graphite is indicated by the presence of a pre-edge signal at 284.2 eV.Entities:
Keywords: NEXAFS; X-ray microscopy; carbon; graphene; nanostructure
Year: 2012 PMID: 23016137 PMCID: PMC3388357 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.3.39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Schematic of the TXM for NEXAFS studies. Monochromated radiation from the undulator is focused by a reflective capillary condenser into the object field. A zone plate objective forms a magnified image on the CCD.
Figure 2(a) Average of aligned TXM images (283–311 eV). (b) Spectra extracted from the three regions indicated by the coloured shapes in part (a): red is from the lacey carbon support, green is from the flat area of the sample, while blue is from the folded region. The signal intensity used to convert the measurements to optical density (OD) was taken from the yellow circular area. Offsets of 0.5 (blue) and 1.5 (red) OD have been used for clarity.
Figure 3Component map of (a) in-plane (σ) and (b) out-of-plane (π) bonds; (c) colour-coded composite of the maps for lacey carbon (red), in-plane (green) and out-of-plane (blue), derived from a three-component fit of the carbon K-edge image sequence.