4.7 Article

N-Graphene Nanowalls via Plasma Nitrogen Incorporation and Substitution: The Experimental Evidence

Journal

NANO-MICRO LETTERS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SHANGHAI JIAO TONG UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s40820-020-0395-5

Keywords

Graphene; Graphene nanowalls; Plasma post-treatment; Nitrogen incorporation; Raman spectroscopy; Vacancy defects

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon Research and Innovation Program [766894]
  2. JSPS
  3. MESS
  4. ARRS under the Japan-Slovenia Research Cooperative Program
  5. HZB [17205612ST/R, 17206156ST, 18106986ST, 191-07892-ST/R, 191-08281 ST/R]

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Incorporating nitrogen (N) atom in graphene is considered a key technique for tuning its electrical properties. However, this is still a great challenge, and it is unclear how to build N-graphene with desired nitrogen configurations. There is a lack of experimental evidence to explain the influence and mechanism of structural defects for nitrogen incorporation into graphene compared to the derived DFT theories. Herein, this gap is bridged through a systematic study of different nitrogen-containing gaseous plasma post-treatments on graphene nanowalls (CNWs) to produce N-CNWs with incorporated and substituted nitrogen. The structural and morphological analyses describe a remarkable difference in the plasma-surface interaction, nitrogen concentration and nitrogen incorporation mechanism in CNWs by using different nitrogen-containing plasma. Electrical conductivity measurements revealed that the conductivity of the N-graphene is strongly influenced by the position and concentration of C-N bonding configurations. These findings open up a new pathway for the synthesis of N-graphene using plasma post-treatment to control the concentration and configuration of incorporated nitrogen for application-specific properties.

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