Graphene-Assisted Controlled
Growth of Highly Aligned ZnO Nanorods and Nanoribbons: Growth Mechanism
and Photoluminescence Properties
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Abstract
We demonstrate graphene-assisted
controlled fabrication of various ZnO 1D nanostructures on the SiO<sub>2</sub>/graphene substrate at a low temperature (540 °C) and
elucidate the growth mechanism. Monolayer and a few layer graphene
prepared by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and subsequently coated
with a thin Au layer followed by rapid thermal annealing is shown
to result in highly aligned wurtzite ZnO nanorods (NRs) with clear
hexagonal facets. On the other hand, direct growth on CVD graphene
without a Au catalyst layer resulted in a randomly oriented growth
of dense ZnO nanoribbons (NRBs). The role of in-plane defects and
preferential clustering of Au atoms on the defect sites of graphene
on the growth of highly aligned ZnO NRs/nanowires (NWs) on graphene
was established from micro-Raman and high-resolution transmission
electron microscopy analyses. Further, we demonstrate strong UV and
visible photoluminescence (PL) from the as-grown and post-growth annealed
ZnO NRs, NWs, and NRBs, and the origin of the PL emission is correlated
well with the X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis. Our results
hint toward an epitaxial growth of aligned ZnO NRs on graphene by
a vapor–liquid–solid mechanism and establish the importance
of defect engineering in graphene for controlled fabrication of graphene–semiconductor
NW hybrids with improved optoelectronic functionalities