硫酸掺杂石墨烯的双通道电荷转移

IF 2.3 4区 化学 Q3 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Kwnaghee Park, S. Ryu
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The mechanism revealed in this study will advance our fundamental understanding of how low-dimensional materials interact with chemical environments. Surface charge transfer (CT) doping or chemical doping refers to the charge injection by adsorbed dopant molecules (electron donor or acceptor). The method, demonstrated early for conductive polymers, is highly effective for low-dimensional materials because of their high fraction of surface atoms. Graphene, a representative two-dimensional (2D) material, strongly interacts with I2, Br2, NO2 and alkali metals, and undergoes substantial changes in its charge density and thus Fermi level. Such changes enabled graphene to be used in the single-molecule detection, pH sensor, photodetector, solar cell and so on. Similar chemical doping has also been successfully exploited for semiconducting 2D materials. 10 Despite the wide functional tunability and potential applications enabled by CT doping, however, its mechanistic details still remain unclear or unexplored except for simple dopants that do not involve bondbreaking chemistry during the doping process. For example, single-entity dopants like atomic K and molecular halogens inject charges upon adsorption and remain as monovalent ionic adsorbates. In contrast, the O2-mediated hole doping of 2D materials had been controversial for a considerable period because of the intertwined roles of oxygen, water and substrates. 12, 13, 14 Recent studies showed that O2/H2O redox couples drive the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR: O2 + 4H + 4e ↔ 2H2O) serving as composite hole dopants in graphene and 2D semiconductors. 14 Although chemical doping with mineral acids has been widely used to enhance electrical conductivity in graphene 15, , the CT process itself has not been scrutinized until recently. Because the ORR consumes electrons of graphene efficiently at low pH as confirmed for HCl solution, the same process should occur in other acids. However, there may be an additional doping channel where their conjugate bases play a role. For example, chemical doping by H2SO4 solution may be more complex than that by HCl because of bisulfate ions (HSO4) and other potentially redox-active species. Notably, the parent and dissociated forms of sulfuric acids collaboratively induce CT doping in graphite and form intercalation compounds in the form of (C24 HSO4 2.5 H2SO4) in the presence of oxidizing agents or electrical activation. Despite the lack of consideration of solvation effect, theoretical calculations predicted sizable CT doping in graphene by HSO4 radicals unlike H2SO4. In this work, we report the concentration-dependent dual-channel CT mechanism of graphene in H2SO4. In-situ Raman spectroscopy was employed with an optical liquid cell to directly monitor the charge density of graphene in a real-time manner. It was revealed that the CT is mainly driven by O2/H2O redox couples in the concentration lower than 6 M, and possibly bisulfate species give an additional contribution at a higher concentration. Single-layer graphene samples were prepared by mechanical exfoliation using kish graphite and Si substrates with 285 nmthick SiO2 layers. To generate nanopores on the graphene surface, the samples were thermally oxidized at 500 °C for 30 min in a quartz tube furnace containing Ar:O2 gas mixture (flow rate = 200:50 mL/min). 22 AFM (atomic force microscopy) topography was obtained under ambient conditions in a noncontact mode with Si tips with a radius of 8 nm. Raman spectra were obtained using a 514 nm laser with a spectrometer with a spectral resolution of 6.0 cm. 20 The average power on samples was maintained below 200 μW to avoid potential photo-induced artifacts. In-situ Raman measurements in sulfuric acid solutions were performed using a customized optical liquid cell with a Teflon body and quartz window. The concentration of dissolved O2 was varied by sparging Ar or O2 gas into the solutions at a rate of 250 mL/min. Figures 1a and 1b show the optical micrograph and AFM height image of a representative nano-perforated sample. The oxidationinduced nanopores were created to facilitate otherwise sluggish molecular diffusion at the graphene-substrate interface and enhance the spatial homogeneity of the CT reaction. Whereas either surface of graphene can accommodate CT, the reaction on the one facing substrates is limited by the interfacial diffusion of redox species. 14 The inhomogeneity-derived G-peak splitting in sulfuric acids could be removed by introducing nanopores. The oxidation procedure typically led to a set of nanopores of ~45 nm in diameter and ~80 μm in density as shown in Figure 1b.","PeriodicalId":9457,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin of The Korean Chemical Society","volume":"180 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Dual‐channel charge transfer doping of graphene by sulfuric acid\",\"authors\":\"Kwnaghee Park, S. 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The mechanism revealed in this study will advance our fundamental understanding of how low-dimensional materials interact with chemical environments. Surface charge transfer (CT) doping or chemical doping refers to the charge injection by adsorbed dopant molecules (electron donor or acceptor). The method, demonstrated early for conductive polymers, is highly effective for low-dimensional materials because of their high fraction of surface atoms. Graphene, a representative two-dimensional (2D) material, strongly interacts with I2, Br2, NO2 and alkali metals, and undergoes substantial changes in its charge density and thus Fermi level. Such changes enabled graphene to be used in the single-molecule detection, pH sensor, photodetector, solar cell and so on. Similar chemical doping has also been successfully exploited for semiconducting 2D materials. 10 Despite the wide functional tunability and potential applications enabled by CT doping, however, its mechanistic details still remain unclear or unexplored except for simple dopants that do not involve bondbreaking chemistry during the doping process. For example, single-entity dopants like atomic K and molecular halogens inject charges upon adsorption and remain as monovalent ionic adsorbates. In contrast, the O2-mediated hole doping of 2D materials had been controversial for a considerable period because of the intertwined roles of oxygen, water and substrates. 12, 13, 14 Recent studies showed that O2/H2O redox couples drive the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR: O2 + 4H + 4e ↔ 2H2O) serving as composite hole dopants in graphene and 2D semiconductors. 14 Although chemical doping with mineral acids has been widely used to enhance electrical conductivity in graphene 15, , the CT process itself has not been scrutinized until recently. Because the ORR consumes electrons of graphene efficiently at low pH as confirmed for HCl solution, the same process should occur in other acids. However, there may be an additional doping channel where their conjugate bases play a role. For example, chemical doping by H2SO4 solution may be more complex than that by HCl because of bisulfate ions (HSO4) and other potentially redox-active species. Notably, the parent and dissociated forms of sulfuric acids collaboratively induce CT doping in graphite and form intercalation compounds in the form of (C24 HSO4 2.5 H2SO4) in the presence of oxidizing agents or electrical activation. Despite the lack of consideration of solvation effect, theoretical calculations predicted sizable CT doping in graphene by HSO4 radicals unlike H2SO4. In this work, we report the concentration-dependent dual-channel CT mechanism of graphene in H2SO4. In-situ Raman spectroscopy was employed with an optical liquid cell to directly monitor the charge density of graphene in a real-time manner. It was revealed that the CT is mainly driven by O2/H2O redox couples in the concentration lower than 6 M, and possibly bisulfate species give an additional contribution at a higher concentration. Single-layer graphene samples were prepared by mechanical exfoliation using kish graphite and Si substrates with 285 nmthick SiO2 layers. To generate nanopores on the graphene surface, the samples were thermally oxidized at 500 °C for 30 min in a quartz tube furnace containing Ar:O2 gas mixture (flow rate = 200:50 mL/min). 22 AFM (atomic force microscopy) topography was obtained under ambient conditions in a noncontact mode with Si tips with a radius of 8 nm. Raman spectra were obtained using a 514 nm laser with a spectrometer with a spectral resolution of 6.0 cm. 20 The average power on samples was maintained below 200 μW to avoid potential photo-induced artifacts. In-situ Raman measurements in sulfuric acid solutions were performed using a customized optical liquid cell with a Teflon body and quartz window. The concentration of dissolved O2 was varied by sparging Ar or O2 gas into the solutions at a rate of 250 mL/min. Figures 1a and 1b show the optical micrograph and AFM height image of a representative nano-perforated sample. The oxidationinduced nanopores were created to facilitate otherwise sluggish molecular diffusion at the graphene-substrate interface and enhance the spatial homogeneity of the CT reaction. Whereas either surface of graphene can accommodate CT, the reaction on the one facing substrates is limited by the interfacial diffusion of redox species. 14 The inhomogeneity-derived G-peak splitting in sulfuric acids could be removed by introducing nanopores. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

以石墨烯和过渡金属二硫族化合物为代表的二维材料经过电荷转移(CT)过程,在强矿物酸中成为空穴掺杂。尽管如此,它们的机制仍然不清楚或存在争议。本研究提出并验证了硫酸中两种不同的CT通道,分别由涉及O2/H2O氧化还原对的氧还原反应和亚硫酸氢盐或相关物质的还原驱动。利用拉曼光谱原位量化了酸诱导的石墨烯电荷密度变化作为氧含量的函数。当酸浓度低于6 M时,前一个通道是有效的,需要溶解氧。在6 M以上,CT的程度更高,因为前者与后者通道配合,后者不需要溶解氧。这项研究揭示的机制将促进我们对低维材料如何与化学环境相互作用的基本理解。表面电荷转移(CT)掺杂或化学掺杂是指通过吸附的掺杂分子(电子供体或电子受体)注入电荷。该方法早期用于导电聚合物,由于其表面原子的高比例,因此对低维材料非常有效。石墨烯是一种典型的二维(2D)材料,它与I2、Br2、NO2和碱金属强烈相互作用,并经历了电荷密度和费米能级的实质性变化。这些变化使石墨烯在单分子检测、pH传感器、光电探测器、太阳能电池等领域得到了广泛的应用。类似的化学掺杂也已成功地用于半导体二维材料。尽管CT掺杂具有广泛的功能可调性和潜在的应用前景,但其机制细节仍然不清楚或未被探索,除了在掺杂过程中不涉及破坏键化学的简单掺杂剂。例如,原子K和分子卤素等单实体掺杂剂在吸附时注入电荷,并保持为单价离子吸附剂。相比之下,由于氧、水和底物的相互交织作用,o2介导的二维材料空穴掺杂在相当长的一段时间内一直存在争议。12,13,14最近的研究表明,O2/H2O氧化还原对作为石墨烯和2D半导体中的复合空穴掺杂剂驱动氧还原反应(ORR: O2 + 4H + 4e↔2H2O)。虽然无机酸的化学掺杂已被广泛用于提高石墨烯的导电性,但直到最近才对CT过程本身进行了仔细研究。由于在HCl溶液中,ORR在低pH下有效地消耗石墨烯的电子,因此在其他酸中也会发生同样的过程。然而,可能存在一个额外的掺杂通道,其中它们的共轭碱起作用。例如,由于硫酸氢离子(HSO4)和其他潜在的氧化活性物质的存在,H2SO4溶液的化学掺杂可能比HCl更复杂。值得注意的是,在氧化剂或电激活的存在下,母体和解离形式的硫酸协同诱导石墨中的CT掺杂,并形成(C24 HSO4 2.5 H2SO4)形式的插层化合物。尽管没有考虑溶剂化效应,但理论计算预测,与H2SO4不同,HSO4自由基会在石墨烯中掺杂相当大的CT。在这项工作中,我们报道了石墨烯在H2SO4中浓度依赖的双通道CT机制。采用原位拉曼光谱技术对石墨烯的电荷密度进行实时监测。结果表明,在浓度低于6 M时,氧化还原反应主要由O2/H2O氧化还原对驱动,而在较高浓度时,亚硫酸氢盐可能有额外的贡献。采用机械剥落法制备单层石墨烯样品,其衬底为石墨烯和硅,衬底为285 nm厚的SiO2层。为了在石墨烯表面生成纳米孔,将样品在含有Ar:O2气体混合物的石英管炉(流量= 200:50 mL/min)中在500°C下热氧化30 min。在环境条件下获得了非接触模式下的22 AFM(原子力显微镜)形貌,Si尖端半径为8 nm。用光谱分辨率为6.0 cm的光谱仪,用514 nm激光器获得拉曼光谱。20样品的平均功率保持在200 μW以下,以避免潜在的光致伪影。在硫酸溶液中进行现场拉曼测量,使用定制的光学液体电池,具有聚四氟乙烯主体和石英窗口。通过以250 mL/min的速率向溶液中喷射氩气或O2气体来改变溶解O2的浓度。图1a和图1b显示了典型纳米穿孔样品的光学显微照片和AFM高度图像。 氧化诱导的纳米孔是为了促进石墨烯-衬底界面上缓慢的分子扩散,并增强CT反应的空间均匀性。然而,石墨烯的任何一个表面都可以容纳CT,在一个面向衬底的反应受到氧化还原物质的界面扩散的限制。引入纳米孔可以消除硫酸中不均匀性引起的g峰分裂。氧化过程通常会产生一组直径约45 nm,密度约80 μm的纳米孔,如图1b所示。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dual‐channel charge transfer doping of graphene by sulfuric acid
Two-dimensional materials represented by graphene and transition metal dichalcogenides undergo charge transfer (CT) processes and become hole-doped in strong mineral acids. Nonetheless, their mechanisms remain unclear or controversial. This work proposes and verifies two distinctive CT channels in sulfuric acids, respectively driven by oxygen reduction reaction involving O2/H2O redox couples and reduction of bisulfate or related species. Acid-induced changes in the charge density of graphene were in-situ quantified as a function of oxygen content using Raman spectroscopy. At acid concentrations lower than 6 M, the former channel is operative, requiring dissolved O2. Above 6 M, the degree of CT was even higher because the former is cooperated with by the latter channel, which does not need dissolved oxygen. The mechanism revealed in this study will advance our fundamental understanding of how low-dimensional materials interact with chemical environments. Surface charge transfer (CT) doping or chemical doping refers to the charge injection by adsorbed dopant molecules (electron donor or acceptor). The method, demonstrated early for conductive polymers, is highly effective for low-dimensional materials because of their high fraction of surface atoms. Graphene, a representative two-dimensional (2D) material, strongly interacts with I2, Br2, NO2 and alkali metals, and undergoes substantial changes in its charge density and thus Fermi level. Such changes enabled graphene to be used in the single-molecule detection, pH sensor, photodetector, solar cell and so on. Similar chemical doping has also been successfully exploited for semiconducting 2D materials. 10 Despite the wide functional tunability and potential applications enabled by CT doping, however, its mechanistic details still remain unclear or unexplored except for simple dopants that do not involve bondbreaking chemistry during the doping process. For example, single-entity dopants like atomic K and molecular halogens inject charges upon adsorption and remain as monovalent ionic adsorbates. In contrast, the O2-mediated hole doping of 2D materials had been controversial for a considerable period because of the intertwined roles of oxygen, water and substrates. 12, 13, 14 Recent studies showed that O2/H2O redox couples drive the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR: O2 + 4H + 4e ↔ 2H2O) serving as composite hole dopants in graphene and 2D semiconductors. 14 Although chemical doping with mineral acids has been widely used to enhance electrical conductivity in graphene 15, , the CT process itself has not been scrutinized until recently. Because the ORR consumes electrons of graphene efficiently at low pH as confirmed for HCl solution, the same process should occur in other acids. However, there may be an additional doping channel where their conjugate bases play a role. For example, chemical doping by H2SO4 solution may be more complex than that by HCl because of bisulfate ions (HSO4) and other potentially redox-active species. Notably, the parent and dissociated forms of sulfuric acids collaboratively induce CT doping in graphite and form intercalation compounds in the form of (C24 HSO4 2.5 H2SO4) in the presence of oxidizing agents or electrical activation. Despite the lack of consideration of solvation effect, theoretical calculations predicted sizable CT doping in graphene by HSO4 radicals unlike H2SO4. In this work, we report the concentration-dependent dual-channel CT mechanism of graphene in H2SO4. In-situ Raman spectroscopy was employed with an optical liquid cell to directly monitor the charge density of graphene in a real-time manner. It was revealed that the CT is mainly driven by O2/H2O redox couples in the concentration lower than 6 M, and possibly bisulfate species give an additional contribution at a higher concentration. Single-layer graphene samples were prepared by mechanical exfoliation using kish graphite and Si substrates with 285 nmthick SiO2 layers. To generate nanopores on the graphene surface, the samples were thermally oxidized at 500 °C for 30 min in a quartz tube furnace containing Ar:O2 gas mixture (flow rate = 200:50 mL/min). 22 AFM (atomic force microscopy) topography was obtained under ambient conditions in a noncontact mode with Si tips with a radius of 8 nm. Raman spectra were obtained using a 514 nm laser with a spectrometer with a spectral resolution of 6.0 cm. 20 The average power on samples was maintained below 200 μW to avoid potential photo-induced artifacts. In-situ Raman measurements in sulfuric acid solutions were performed using a customized optical liquid cell with a Teflon body and quartz window. The concentration of dissolved O2 was varied by sparging Ar or O2 gas into the solutions at a rate of 250 mL/min. Figures 1a and 1b show the optical micrograph and AFM height image of a representative nano-perforated sample. The oxidationinduced nanopores were created to facilitate otherwise sluggish molecular diffusion at the graphene-substrate interface and enhance the spatial homogeneity of the CT reaction. Whereas either surface of graphene can accommodate CT, the reaction on the one facing substrates is limited by the interfacial diffusion of redox species. 14 The inhomogeneity-derived G-peak splitting in sulfuric acids could be removed by introducing nanopores. The oxidation procedure typically led to a set of nanopores of ~45 nm in diameter and ~80 μm in density as shown in Figure 1b.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
23.50%
发文量
182
审稿时长
2.3 months
期刊介绍: The Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society is an official research journal of the Korean Chemical Society. It was founded in 1980 and reaches out to the chemical community worldwide. It is strictly peer-reviewed and welcomes Accounts, Communications, Articles, and Notes written in English. The scope of the journal covers all major areas of chemistry: analytical chemistry, electrochemistry, industrial chemistry, inorganic chemistry, life-science chemistry, macromolecular chemistry, organic synthesis, non-synthetic organic chemistry, physical chemistry, and materials chemistry.
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