| Literature DB >> 26050795 |
Deok-Soo Kim1, Hyuksang Kwon1, Alexey Yu Nikitin2,3, Seongjin Ahn4, Luis Martín-Moreno5, Francisco J García-Vidal6, Sunmin Ryu7, Hongki Min4, Zee Hwan Kim1.
Abstract
The stacking orders in few-layer graphene (FLG) strongly influences the electronic properties of the material. To explore the stacking-specific properties of FLG in detail, one needs powerful microscopy techniques that visualize stacking domains with sufficient spatial resolution. We demonstrate that infrared (IR) scattering scanning near-field optical microscopy (sSNOM) directly maps out the stacking domains of FLG with a nanometric resolution, based on the stacking-specific IR conductivities of FLG. The intensity and phase contrasts of sSNOM are compared with the sSNOM contrast model, which is based on the dipolar tip-sample coupling and the theoretical conductivity spectra of FLG, allowing a clear assignment of each FLG domain as Bernal, rhombohedral, or intermediate stacks for tri-, tetra-, and pentalayer graphene. The method offers 10-100 times better spatial resolution than the far-field Raman and infrared spectroscopic methods, yet it allows far more experimental flexibility than the scanning tunneling microscopy and electron microscopy.Entities:
Keywords: multilayer graphene; nanoplasmonics; nanoscopy; near-field optics; stacking orders
Year: 2015 PMID: 26050795 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b02813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881