4 research outputs found
Cleaning graphene: Comparing heat treatments in air and in vacuum
Surface impurities and contamination often seriously degrade the properties of two‐dimensional materials such as graphene. To remove contamination, thermal annealing is commonly used. We present a comparative analysis of annealing treatments in air and in vacuum, both ex situ and “pre situ,” where an ultra‐high vacuum treatment chamber is directly connected to an aberration‐corrected scanning transmission electron microscope. While ex situ treatments do remove contamination, it is challenging to obtain atomically clean surfaces after ambient transfer. However, pre situ cleaning with radiative or laser heating appears reliable and well suited to clean graphene without damage to most suspended areas.
Pre situ annealing of typical dirty graphene samples yields atomically clean areas several hundred nm2 in size.© 2017 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinhei
Electron-Beam Manipulation of Silicon Dopants in Graphene
The direct manipulation of individual atoms in materials using scanning probe microscopy has been a seminal achievement of nanotechnology. Recent advances in imaging resolution and sample stability have made scanning transmission electron microscopy a promising alternative for single-atom manipulation of covalently bound materials. Pioneering experiments using an atomically focused electron beam have demonstrated the directed movement of silicon atoms over a handful of sites within the graphene lattice. Here, we achieve a much greater degree of control, allowing us to precisely move silicon impurities along an extended path, circulating a single hexagon, or back and forth between the two graphene sublattices. Even with manual operation, our manipulation rate is already comparable to the state-of-the-art in any atomically precise technique. We further explore the influence of electron energy on the manipulation rate, supported by improved theoretical modeling taking into account the vibrations of atoms near the impurities, and implement feedback to detect manipulation events in real time. In addition to atomic-level engineering of its structure and properties, graphene also provides an excellent platform for refining the accuracy of quantitative models and for the development of automated manipulation.Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Societ
Implanting Germanium into Graphene
Incorporating heteroatoms into the graphene lattice may be used to tailor its electronic, mechanical and chemical properties, although directly observed substitutions have thus far been limited to incidental Si impurities and P, N and B dopants introduced using low-energy ion implantation. We present here the heaviest impurity to date, namely 74Ge+ ions implanted into monolayer graphene. Although sample contamination remains an issue, atomic resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy imaging and quantitative image simulations show that Ge can either directly substitute single atoms, bonding to three carbon neighbors in a buckled out-of-plane configuration, or occupy an in-plane position in a divacancy. First-principles molecular dynamics provides further atomistic insight into the implantation process, revealing a strong chemical effect that enables implantation below the graphene displacement threshold energy. Our results demonstrate that heavy atoms can be implanted into the graphene lattice, pointing a way toward advanced applications such as single-atom catalysis with graphene as the template.Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Societ
Intrinsic core level photoemission of suspended monolayer graphene
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy of graphene is important both for its characterization and as a model for other carbon materials. Despite great recent interest, the intrinsic photoemission of its single layer has not been unambiguously measured, nor is the layer dependence in free-standing multilayers accurately determined. We combine scanning transmission electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy with synchrotron-based scanning photoelectron microscopy to characterize the same areas of suspended graphene samples down to the atomic level. This allows us to assign spectral signals to regions of precisely known layer number and purity. The core level binding energy of the monolayer is measured at 284.70 eV, thus 0.28 eV higher than that of graphite, with intermediate values found for few layers. This trend is reproduced by density functional theory with or without explicit van der Waals interactions, indicating that intralayer charge rearrangement dominates, but in our model of static screening the magnitudes of the shifts are underestimated by half.© 2018 American Physical Societ