Work Function Engineering of Graphene
Abstract
:1. Scope of the Review
2. Graphene: A Unique Carbon Allotrope
3. Graphene: A Two Dimensional Form of Carbon with Unusual Band Structure and Characteristics
- (1)
- Graphene is a zero-band gap perfect 2D semi-conductor with a tiny overlap between valence and conduction bands [6];
- (2)
- (3)
- Graphene shows a strong ambipolar electric field effect with charge carrier concentrations up to 1013 cm2 and room temperature mobility of ~10,000 cm2·s−1 [6];
- (4)
- (5)
- Graphene displays high thermal conductivity with a value of ~5000 Wmk−1 for a single layer sheet at room temperature [19];
- (6)
- Graphene exhibits high optical transparency with absorption of ~2.3% towards visible light [20];
- (7)
- Graphene is incredibly strong, mechanically (tensile strength of ~130 GPa, for a defect free single layer, Young’s modulus of 1 Tpa, third order elastic stiffness ≈2 Tpa); while remaining highly flexible and very light (0.77 mg m−2) and possesses a very high specific surface area (~2630 m2·g−1) [21].
4. Graphene: Potential Applications and Importance of Work Function
5. Graphene Synthesis: Relationship to Applications
Method | Precursor | Electronic quality | Advantage | Disadvantage | Commercialization | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mechanical Exfoliation | Graphite | High | Inexpensive and time saving method | Flakes randomly distributed, poor yield | Not scalable for commercialization | [76] |
Arc discharge method | Graphite | High | Applicable to obtain Boron or nitrogen doped graphene | Cannot obtain pure graphene | Not scalable | [78] |
Wet chemical synthesis such as Hummer, Brodie | Graphite | High | Transparent conductive film, useful to synthesis graphene based composites | Presence of oxygen impurities are not suitable for most of the electronic applications | Can be obtained in lab but not good enough for commercialization | [92] |
Chemical vapour deposition | Hydrocarbons | High | Promising method that has all the above mentioned advantages | Transfer of graphene films deteriorates graphene quality and causes wrinkle formation | Possible | [80,82] |
Solvothermal synthesis | Ethanol | Not available | Cheap and easily available precursor | Popcorn effect arises due to nucleation of sheets | Scalable | [96] |
Epitaxial growth on metals | Ultrathin graphitic film | High | Single to multi layer graphene sheets can be obtained | Requires high temperature, expensive and difficult transfer process | Not feasible | [97] |
6. Work Function and Tuning of the Work Function of Graphene
6.1. Effect of Oxygen Functionalities on the Work Function of Graphene
6.2. Work Function Engineering by Reduction of Graphene Oxide
6.3. Work Function Engineering of GO Using Functionalization and Self-Assembled Monolayer
6.4. Work Function Engineering Using Self-Assembled Monolayer (SAM) and Layer by Layer Technique
6.5. Work Function Engineering of Graphene Using Noble Metal Doping
6.6. Work Function Engineering on Graphene Based Gold (Au) Composite
6.7. Work Function Engineering on Graphene Based Silver (Ag) Composite
6.8. Work Function Engineering for Graphene Based Platinum (Pt) Composite
S.No. | Modified Graphene | Method | Precursor | WF (eV) | Improved property | Application | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Graphene-ZnO-Au | Hydrothermal | Zn Acetate , HAuCl4 | Value not given | Efficiency = 3.5–4.5 fold more than ZnO | Removing pollutant (nitrobenzene) | [157] |
2 | Various Au dopants on graphene | Chemical doping | AuBr3, Au2S, Au(OH)3, AuCl3 | 5, 4.8, 4.6, 4.9 as doped and 4.5, 4.4, 4.55, 4.3 eV as annealed (w.r.t. the precursor) | Multiuse of graphene due to tunable WF property | Energy conversion devices and sensors | [159] |
3 | Au/graphene | Chemical doping | AuCl3 | Increase by 0.5 eV with increase in doping time | Tunable WF property | Optoelectronic devices | [60] |
4 | Ag/graphene | Photochemical silver functionalization | AgNO3 | Value not given | Suppressed e-h recombination | Efficient removal of hazardous materials | [161] |
5 | Au/Ag/Pt-graphene | Graphene adsorption metal substrate | Au, Ag, Pt substrates were used | 5.54–4.74, 4.92–4.24, 6.13–4.8 eV | Multipurpose modified graphene | Energy conversion devices | [168] |
7. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Garg, R.; Dutta, N.K.; Choudhury, N.R. Work Function Engineering of Graphene. Nanomaterials 2014, 4, 267-300. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano4020267
Garg R, Dutta NK, Choudhury NR. Work Function Engineering of Graphene. Nanomaterials. 2014; 4(2):267-300. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano4020267
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarg, Rajni, Naba K. Dutta, and Namita Roy Choudhury. 2014. "Work Function Engineering of Graphene" Nanomaterials 4, no. 2: 267-300. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano4020267