Login / Signup

The effect of atmospheric doping on pressure-dependent Raman scattering in supported graphene.

Egor A KolesovMikhail S TivanovOlga V KorolikOlesya O KapitanovaGennady N PaninHak Dong ChoTae Won KangGennady N Panin
Published in: Beilstein journal of nanotechnology (2018)
Atmospheric doping of supported graphene was investigated by Raman scattering under different pressures. Various Raman spectra parameters were found to depend on the pressure and the substrate material. The results are interpreted in terms of atmospheric adsorption leading to a change in graphene charge carrier density and the effect of the substrate on the electronic and phonon properties of graphene. It was found that adsorption of molecules from the atmosphere onto graphene doped with nitrogen (electron doping) compensates for the electron charge. Furthermore, the atmosphere-induced doping drastically decreases the spatial heterogeneity of charge carriers in graphene doped with nitrogen, while the opposite effect was observed for undoped samples. The results of this study should be taken into account for the development of sensors and nanoelectronic devices based on graphene.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • carbon nanotubes
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • particulate matter
  • solar cells
  • single cell
  • transition metal
  • air pollution
  • endothelial cells
  • carbon dioxide
  • low cost
  • amino acid