| Literature DB >> 26775647 |
Alice A K King1,2, Benjamin R Davies1,3, Nikan Noorbehesht1, Peter Newman1,3, Tamara L Church1, Andrew T Harris1, Joselito M Razal4, Andrew I Minett1,5.
Abstract
Raman spectroscopy is among the primary techniques for the characterisation of graphene materials, as it provides insights into the quality of measured graphenes including their structure and conductivity as well as the presence of dopants. However, our ability to draw conclusions based on such spectra is limited by a lack of understanding regarding the origins of the peaks. Consequently, traditional characterisation techniques, which estimate the quality of the graphene material using the intensity ratio between the D and the G peaks, are unreliable for both GO and rGO. Herein we reanalyse the Raman spectra of graphenes and show that traditional methods rely upon an apparent G peak which is in fact a superposition of the G and D' peaks. We use this understanding to develop a new Raman characterisation method for graphenes that considers the D' peak by using its overtone the 2D'. We demonstrate the superiority and consistency of this method for calculating the oxygen content of graphenes, and use the relationship between the D' peak and graphene quality to define three regimes. This has important implications for purification techniques because, once GO is reduced beyond a critical threshold, further reduction offers limited gain in conductivity.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26775647 PMCID: PMC4726011 DOI: 10.1038/srep19491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Changes in Raman features as a function of C/O atom ratio.
(a) Difference in the D’inf position and Gapp as a function of the C/O ratio for multiple samples from various sources; with line of best fit. (b) Change in D’inf − Gapp as a function of C/O ratio on a broken scale for clarity, coloured boxes show the regions of GO (red), and graphene (blue), with rGO occupying the region in between, standard error in the mean used for samples measured in our laboratory, thermally reduced between 0 and 1,000 °C (∎), chemically reduced with ascorbic acid (▸), chemically reduced with ethylene glycol (▾), microwave-reduced under vacuum (•), thermally reduced between 0 and 2,000 °C (□) data interpolated with permission from25, chemically reduced with hydrazine (◻) data interpolated with permission from26, chemically reduced with hydrazine (⚫) data interpolated with permission from27, chemically reduced with hydrazine (▴) data interpolated with permission from28, (◀) graphene sample assuming <0.1% oxygen, (c) the variation in the ID/IGapp ratio as a function of the C/O ratio for the same samples.
Figure 2Example of two-peak fits applied to the Gapp peak of GO and rGO.
(a,b) GO before and after thermal reduction at 1,000 °C respectively and (c,d) GO before and after reduction with hydrazine, respectively (modified with permission from16).
Spectral features from a two-peak fit of the Gapp band from Fig. 2.
| G position | ID/IG | D’ Intensity | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a GO-1 | 1,574.2 | 1.88 | 0.82 |
| b rGO-1 | 1,579.0 | 1.12 | 0.22 |
| c GO-2 | 1,574.0 | 1.42 | 0.49 |
| d rGO-2 | 1,579.0 | 1.24 | 0.27 |
Figure 3Dispersion of Gapp position with changing excitation energy for GO (•) and an rGO reduced under nitrogen at 600 °C ( □), with the line of best fit and gradient for each, standard error in the mean used for error bars and least squares linear regression for the line of best fit.