| Literature DB >> 30279366 |
Marika Schleberger1, Jani Kotakoski2.
Abstract
Two-dimenhemical">sional (2D) materialsEntities:
Keywords: 2D materials; boron nitride; defect engineering; electron irradiation; graphene; ion irradiation; transition metal dichalcogenides
Year: 2018 PMID: 30279366 PMCID: PMC6212862 DOI: 10.3390/ma11101885
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Energy deposition by swift heavy and highly charged ions. (a) Total stopping power S (continuous lines) of various ion species (H, Xe, U) in graphite as a function of the kinetic energy of the projectile calculated with SRIM. The contribution of nuclear stopping is plotted with dashed lines, of electronic stopping with dotted lines. The data for protons is shown in the inset. (b) Potential energy of a Xe ion as a function of its charge state q (blue bars). The green bars depict the ionization energy of the last electron. Jumps in the ionization energy occur after an electron shell has been completely emptied.
Figure 2Evolution of the lattice temperatures due to ion impact calculated with the two temperature model showing the different depths of energy deposition of SHI and HCI. (a) Lattice temperatures for an SHI (11.4 MeV/amu Ca with keV/nm) traversing crystalline SiO. From Ref. [43]. © IOP Publishing. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. (b) Lattice temperatures for an HCI (Xe and Xe) in CaF for two different kinetic energies (150 eV and 10 keV). Reprinted with permission from Ref. [44], Copyright (2011) by the American Physical Society. Note the different z-scales for the two different ion types.
Figure 3Formation and growth of vacancy-type defects with rotated-hexagon kernels in multivacancy structures. The structural changes were obtained under 100 keV electron irradiation. The images are eight subsequent frames recorded during the experiment. The initial configuration in (a) consists of three divacancies in the armchair orientation, in the final configuration (h) 24 atoms are missing. Scale bar is 1 nm. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [55], Copyright (2011) by the American Physical Society.
Figure 4Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of atom-number-conserving transformations in graphene. (a) Migration step of a Si impurity atom caused by an electron impact on its neighboring carbon atom (marked with a red circle). (b) Stone-Wales transformation caused by an electron impact on one of the carbon atoms (marked with a red circle). From Ref. [64].
Figure 5Electron-irradiation effects in non-graphene 2D materials. (a) Triangular vacancies formed into hexagonal boron nitride under electron irradiation at 80 kV. The red and blue marks stand for atoms of the two different elements. The scale bar is 1 nm. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [66], Copyright (2009) American Chemical Society. (b) Accumulation of defects close to an edge of MoS under 80 kV electron irradiation. In the last frame (bottom), the created vacancies have arranged into line-defects oriented with respect to the edge. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [68], Copyright (2013) American Physical Society. (c) Phase transition 1H→1T’ in MoTe caused by electron irradiation at 60 kV. Scale bar is 0.5 nm. From Ref. [70], https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03760.
Figure 6Defect creation in graphene by low energy ion irradiation. (a1) Evolution of the Raman spectra of graphene with increasing ion fluence in units of ions/cm (Ar with eV). (a2) The intensity ratio of the D and G peak as a function of fluence (here given in terms of the mean distance between two impacts) shows a clear maximum at the point where the structurally disordered regions begin to dominate. This behavior is in contrast to graphite, as shown in the inset in (a2). Reprinted from Ref. [71]. Copyright (2010), with permission from Elsevier. (b) Results of MD simulations of graphene evolution under noble gas ion irradiation. A significant probability to produce single (b2) or double vacancies (b5) in graphene is achieved at kinetic energies of (0.1–30) keV, where the nuclear stopping is at its maximum, compare with Figure 1a. More complex defects (b6) are rarely produced and only at higher energies. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [72], copyright (2010) by the American Physical Society.
Figure 7Ion-implanted impurity atoms in graphene, as imaged with scanning transmission electron microscopy. Due to the atomic-number dependent contrast, lighter atoms appear dark and heavier bright. (a) Boron (dark atom) implanted at 25 eV and (b) nitrogen (bright atom) implanted at 25 eV. Both images adapted with permission from Ref. [87], Copyright (2013) American Chemical Society. (c) Phosphorus (bright atom) implanted at 30 eV. The bright area at the bottom and on the left is caused by carbon-based contamination on graphene. Adapted from Ref. [92], licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. (d,e) Three- and fourfold-coordinated implanted germanium atoms. Implantation energy was 20 eV. Reprinted with permission from Ref. [93]. Copyright (2018) American Chemical Society.
Figure 8Folding of graphene and other 2D materials by SHI irradiation. (a) The sketch visualizes the backfolded graphene after an ion has impinged onto the surface under a grazing angle of incidence . © IOP Publishing. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [112]. All rights reserved. Irradiation induced foldings as imaged by AFM in (a1) single and bilayer graphene, (a2) hBN, and (a3) MoS, from Ref. [113]. (b) The shape of the graphene folding pattern (outlines shown in (b) are taken from AFM images) depends strongly on the angle of incidence. At larger angles the pattern consist of multiple foldings oriented along low-indexed crystallographic directions of the graphene [114] as shown in the inset in (b), while under very grazing incidence the azimuthal angle determines the direction of the two foldings, which are aligned along the ion trajectory, see Ref. [112]. (c,d): The substrate also influences shape and size of the foldings. AFM images of suspended graphene show slits (c1), which in fact are small foldings as can be seen in atomically resolved TEM images (c2); (d1) SiC-substrate, (d2) SiO-substrate, (d3) Poly(methyl methacrylate)-substrate. Scale bars are 400 nm. © IOP Publishing. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [112]. All rights reserved.
Figure 9Pore creation in supported and suspended graphene by SHI irradiation. (a,b) MD simulations of SHI irradiation of graphene. (a) Results for graphene on a SiO substrate. Large pores can be created by individual impacts, the size of which can be controlled via the electronic stopping of the projectile. Data is shown for values of (1) 6.5 keV/nm, (2) 8 keV/nm, (3) 10 keV/nm, (4) 12 keV/nm. Only graphene is shown for clarity. Reprinted from from Ref. [117], Copyright (2015), with permission from Elsevier. (b) Results for graphene without substrate. Again, the pore size increases with increasing electronic stopping. Reprinted from Ref. [124], Copyright (2017), with permission from Elsevier. (c,d) Scanning electron microscope images from graphene/polymer membranes which have been irradiated with SHI and subsequently etched. Composite membranes with nanometer-sized pores in the graphene can be obtained in this way. (c) Reprinted from from Ref. [126], Copyright (2016), with permission from Elsevier; (d) Reproduced from Ref. [127] with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 10Examples for effects of HCI irradiation of 2D materials. (a) Graphene irradiated with 180 keV Xe ions at a fluence of /cm remains largely unaffected. From Ref. [41], licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. (b) In contrast, MoS irradiated also with 180 keV Xe exhibits round nanometer-sized pores. From Ref. [144]. (c,d) Irradiation of ultrathin carbon nanomembranes with HCI. The HCI can be used to create pores of various sizes in the membrane depending on the chosen charge state, i.e., the potential energy of the projectile. Reprinted from Ref. [147], with the permission of AIP Publishing.