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Tuning graphene doping by carbon monoxide intercalation at the Ni(111) interface

Authors :
Zhiyu Zou
Sunil Bhardwaj
Virginia Carnevali
Cinzia Cepek
Sara Fiori
Cristina Africh
Simone del Puppo
Francesca Zarabara
Laerte L. Patera
Mirco Panighel
Maria Peressi
Daniele Perilli
Giovanni Comelli
Erik Zupanič
Cristiana Di Valentin
Gabriele Fornasier
Alberto Lodi Rizzini
Del Puppo, S
Carnevali, V
Perilli, D
Zarabara, F
Rizzini, A
Fornasier, G
Zupanic, E
Fiori, S
Patera, L
Panighel, M
Bhardwaj, S
Zou, Z
Comelli, G
Africh, C
Cepek, C
Di Valentin, C
Peressi, M
Del Puppo, Simone
Carnevali, Virginia
Perilli, Daniele
Zarabara, Francesca
Rizzini, Alberto Lodi
Fornasier, Gabriele
Zupanič, Erik
Fiori, Sara
Patera, Laerte L.
Panighel, Mirco
Bhardwaj, Sunil
Zou, Zhiyu
Comelli, Giovanni
Africh, Cristina
Cepek, Cinzia
Di Valentin, Cristiana
Peressi, Maria
Source :
Carbon. 176:253-261
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Under near-ambient pressure conditions, carbon monoxide molecules intercalate underneath an epitaxial graphene monolayer grown on Ni(111), getting trapped into the confined region at the interface. On the basis of ab-initio density functional theory calculations, we provide here a full investigation of the intercalated CO pattern, highlighting the modifications induced on the graphene electronic structure. For a CO coverage as low as 0.14 monolayer (ML), the graphene layer is spatially decoupled from the metallic substrate, with a significant C 1s core level shift towards lower binding energies. The most relevant signature of the CO intercalation is a clear switching of the graphene doping state, which changes from n-type, when strongly interacting with the metal surface, to p-type. The shift of the Dirac cone linearly depends on the CO coverage, reaching about 0.9 eV for the saturation value of 0.57 ML. Theoretical predictions are compared with the results of scanning tunnelling microscopy, low-energy electron diffraction and photoemission spectroscopy experiments, which confirm the proposed scenario for the nearly saturated intercalated CO system. This result opens the way to the application of the graphene/Ni(111) interface as gas sensor to easily detect and quantify the presence of carbon monoxide.

Details

ISSN :
00086223
Volume :
176
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Carbon
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....92c4748c0a45af4f5d89f4d46ab2bb40
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2021.01.120