| Literature DB >> 35010102 |
Aristeidis Stathis1,2, Zoi Bouza1,2, Ioannis Papadakis1,2, Stelios Couris1,2.
Abstract
In the present work the impact of in situ photoreduction, by means of ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, on the nonlinear optical response (NLO) of some graphene oxide (GO), fluorographene (GF), hydrogenated fluorographene (GFH) and graphene (G) dispersions is studied. In situ UV photoreduction allowed for the extended modification of the degree of functionalization (i.e., oxidization, fluorination and hydrogenation), leading to the effective tuning of the corresponding sp2/sp3 hybridization ratios. The nonlinear optical properties of the studied samples prior to and after UV irradiation were determined by means of the Z-scan technique using visible (532 nm), 4 ns laser excitation, and were found to change significantly. More specifically, while GO's nonlinear optical response increases with irradiation time, GF and GFH present a monotonic decrease. The graphene dispersions' nonlinear optical response remains unaffected after prolonged UV irradiation for more than an hour. The present findings demonstrate that UV photoreduction can be an effective and simple strategy for tuning the nonlinear optical response of these graphene derivatives in a controllable way, resulting in derivatives with custom-made responses, thus more suitable for different photonic and optoelectronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: UV irradiation; fluorographene; graphene; graphene functionalization; graphene oxide; hydrogenated fluorographene; nonlinear optical response
Year: 2022 PMID: 35010102 PMCID: PMC8746475 DOI: 10.3390/nano12010152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Configuration of the Z-scan technique.
Figure 2Evolution of the UV–Vis–NIR absorption spectra of non-irradiated and irradiated (a) GO, (b) GF and (c) GFH dispersions under UV irradiation.
Figure 3UV–Vis–NIR absorption spectra of pristine and irradiated G dispersion.
Figure 4Representative Z-scan recordings showing the evolution of the NLO properties of non-irradiated and irradiated (a) G, (b) GO, (c) GF and (d) GFH dispersions.
NLO parameters of G, GO, GF and GFH before and after UV irradiation. All values refer to a concentration of 1 mg mL−1.
| Sample | β | γ′ | Imχ(3) | Reχ(3) | |χ(3)| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G | 1240 ± 149 | 1440 ± 173 | 680 ± 79 | 1880 ± 221 | 2000 ± 313 |
| GO | 44 ± 5 | −81 ± 8 | 20 ± 2 | −91 ± 9 | 95 ± 9 |
| iGO-5 | 81 ± 10 | −100 ± 9 | 37 ± 4 | −112 ± 10 | 118 ± 11 |
| iGO-10 | 138 ± 12 | −125 ± 15 | 63 ± 6 | −140 ± 17 | 154 ± 18 |
| iGO-40 | 263 ± 20 | −263 ± 24 | 121 ± 9 | −294 ± 27 | 318 ± 28 |
| GF | 683 ± 72 | −1583 ± 177 | 367 ± 38 | −2050 ± 226 | 2083 ± 230 |
| iGF-5 | 475 ± 60 | −1317 ± 145 | 250 ± 32 | −1708 ± 185 | 1725 ± 187 |
| iGF-10 | 333 ± 32 | −1083 ± 115 | 175 ± 17 | −1408 ± 147 | 1417 ± 148 |
| iGF-15 | 192 ± 18 | −900 ± 85 | 100 ± 9 | −1158 ± 108 | 1168 ± 109 |
| GFH | 8067 ± 811 | 3700 ± 375 | 3867 ± 390 | 4333 ± 439 | 5807 ± 598 |
| iGFH-7 | 4000 ± 254 | 1800 ± 235 | 1933 ± 122 | 2107 ± 298 | 2867 ± 322 |
| iGFH-9 | 2000 ± 187 | 900 ± 90 | 967 ± 90 | 1067 ± 105 | 1433 ± 138 |
| iGFH-11 | 1033 ± 120 | 467 ± 41 | 497 ± 57 | 533 ± 48 | 730 ± 74 |
Figure 5Variation in the Reχ(3)/Imχ(3) ratio for each sample before and after irradiation.