| Literature DB >> 26486966 |
Paul F Bazylewski1, Van Luan Nguyen2, Robert P C Bauer1, Adrian H Hunt1, Eamon J G McDermott3, Brett D Leedahl1, Andrey I Kukharenko4,5, Seif O Cholakh5, Ernst Z Kurmaev4,5, Peter Blaha3, Alexander Moewes1, Young Hee Lee2,6, Gap Soo Chang1.
Abstract
This study reports a scalable and economical method to open a band gap in single layer graphene by deposition of cobalt metal on its surface using physical vapor deposition in high vacuum. At low cobalt thickness, clusters form at impurity sites on the graphene without etching or damaging the graphene. When exposed to oxygen at room temperature, oxygen functional groups form in proportion to the cobalt thickness that modify the graphene band structure. Cobalt/Graphene resulting from this treatment can support a band gap of 0.30 eV, while remaining largely undamaged to preserve its structural and electrical properties. A mechanism of cobalt-mediated band opening is proposed as a two-step process starting with charge transfer from metal to graphene, followed by formation of oxides where cobalt has been deposited. Contributions from the formation of both CoO and oxygen functional groups on graphene affect the electronic structure to open a band gap. This study demonstrates that cobalt-mediated oxidation is a viable method to introduce a band gap into graphene at room temperature that could be applicable in electronics applications.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26486966 PMCID: PMC4614253 DOI: 10.1038/srep15380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Photoelectron and Raman Spectroscopy of graphene samples on Cu and SiO2 substrates.
(a) C K XPS, (b) O K XPS of Co/Graphene/Cu with peaks fitted using Voigt functions to locate the component peaks of the 0.06 nm Co/graphene spectrum. AFM results of a 2 × 2 μm2 area topography for Co/Graphene/SiO2 with (c) 0.06 nm, (d) 0.12 nm, and (e) 0.25 nm of Co with roughness profiles below. The roughness profile shown corresponds to the red line in the upper panel images.
Figure 2(a) Raman spectra of the Co/Graphene/SiO2 compared to un-deposited Graphene/SiO2. (b) and (c) show Raman mapping results of the D and G-bands for representative samples of pristine graphene/SiO2 and Co(0.25 nm)/Graphene, respectively.
Raman band locations and integrated peak area ratios.
| Gr/SiO2 | 1353 | 1593 | 2455 | 2689 | 0.00325 | 0.0138 | 4.26 | ||
| Co 0.06 nm | 1353 | 1593 | 2458 | 2689 | 0.00108 | 0.0479 | 4.44 | ||
| Co 0.12 nm | 1353 | 1589 | 2459 | 2688 | 0.0628 | 0.2504 | 3.98 | ||
| Co 0.25 nm | 1353 | 1531 | 1586 | 1634 | 2458 | 2686 | 0.0109 | 0.0724 | 6.71 |
Figure 3X-ray spectroscopy results of Co/graphene/SiO2.
(a) Non-resonant C Kα XES and C K XAS spectra, (b) smoothed XES of graphene/SiO2 compared to Graphene with 0.12 nm of Co deposited, and (c) Co L XAS spectra for Co/graphene/SiO2 samples compared to pristine graphene and references including a Co2+ simulation.
Figure 4(a) Schematic representation of band opening in Co/graphene/SiO2. Co deposition on graphene followed by local graphene oxidation and Co-oxide formation. This procedure creates semiconducting graphene that may be adjacent to un-deposited conducting graphene. (b) Simulated density of states for CoO/Graphene using mBJ and PBE force relaxation methods. A semiconducting gap is predicted in both spin channels for both methods when CoO is present as a monomer. (c) Image of CoO/graphene used for simulations.