Byung Hyo
Kim
a,
Hyeonhu
Bae
b,
Hyesung
Park
c,
Hoonkyung
Lee
b,
Peter
Ercius
*d and
Jungwon
Park
*ae
aCenter for Nanoparticle Research, Institute for Basic Science (IBS), Seoul 08826, Republic of Korea
bDepartment of Physics, Konkuk University, Seoul 05029, Republic of Korea
cDepartment of Energy Engineering, School of Energy and Chemical Engineering, Low Dimensional Carbon Materials Center, Perovtronic Research Center, Ulsan National Institute Science and Technology (UNIST), Ulsan 44919, Republic of Korea
dNational Center for Electron Microscopy, Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. E-mail: percius@lbl.gov
eSchool of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Institute of Chemical Process, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Republic of Korea. E-mail: jungwonpark@snu.ac.kr
First published on 22nd November 2018
Heterostructures constructed of graphene and colloidal nanocrystals provide a unique way to exploit the coupled physical properties of the two functional building blocks. Studying the interface structure between the two constituent materials is important to understand the formation mechanism and the resulting physical and chemical properties. Along with ab initio calculations, we elucidate that the bending rigidity and the strong van der Waals interaction of graphene to the metal surface guide the formation of a tight and conformal interface. Using theoretical foundations, we construct colloidal nanocrystal–graphene heterostructures with controlled interfacial structures and directly investigate the cross-sectional structures of them at high resolution by using aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy. The experimental method and observations we present here will link the empirical methods for the formation of nanocrystal–graphene heterostructures to the mechanistic understanding of their properties.
However, in many examples of heterostructures used as catalysts and in electronic devices, the surface of the constituent nanomaterial is not bare, protected by stabilizing reagents used in the synthesis. For example, solution-synthesized nanocrystals are covered with stabilizing organic ligands which are expected to affect interfacial interactions between graphene and the nanocrystals.2 In this scenario, the interface structure will be further complicated by the presence of another interlayer with different mechanical and chemical properties from both the substrate and the graphene. The organic ligands on the nanocrystals typically affect the charge transfer dynamics at the interface of heterostructures.14,15 In contrast, formation of a tight interface presumably promotes the electron transfer between graphene and nanocrsytals.16 Therefore, direct observation of the interface structures between graphene and nanocrystals is an important step for the development of the controlled heterostructured devices. In addition, careful theoretical evaluation regarding thermodynamic aspects that play critical roles in the formation of heterostructures can be elaborated and used to design heterostructures with a desired interfacial structure. Important factors to construct a heterostructure include the binding energy of organic ligands to the substrate, the binding energy of graphene to the substrate, and the overall trend of those energies depending on the ligand coverage. Direct observation at the atomic-scale of the interface between graphene and an underlying material can also answer important questions about the local structure and separation at different locations of the interface between the two materials, which result from the interplay of adhesion energy, stiffness, morphology, and surface roughness. Nonetheless, most microscopy techniques are unable to directly observe the structure of graphene interfaces due to a discrepancy which arises from the 2-dimenstional nature of the graphene–substrate interface and the working principles of microscopy tools. They are usually used to acquire a top-down projection of the structure, not a cross-section, and thus the interface is obscured in projection due to overlapping features.
Here, we first build a theoretical foundation via ab initio calculations that show strong interactions between graphene and the metal nanocrystal surface which promote a tight contact between themselves by substituting for the surface ligands of the nanocrystal. Based on the calculations, we prepare heterostructures with an interface of solution-synthesized metal nanocrystals that mimic typical nanoscale topology with various numbers of graphene sheets to study their interfacial properties at high resolution by aberration-corrected TEM. The geometry of the heterostructures is designed to present the graphene–nanocrystal interface parallel to the imaging direction of aberration-corrected TEM, consequently, allowing direct structural investigation at the atomic-scale. We also found that the mechanical elasticity of multi-layer graphene, as controlled by the number of layers, determines the degree of conformality between the two constituent materials.
Since van der Waals (vdW) interactions are the dominant force between graphene and nanocrystals, the vdW interactions should be considered to confirm the possibility of forming the graphene–nanocrystal heterostructures. To investigate the effects of the vdW interaction, we also carried out calculations with LDA + D2 which include a dispersion correction for the vdW interaction.22 The vdW correction increases the binding energies between graphene and the Ag surface from 11.6 meV Å−2 to 42.3 meV Å−2 (Fig. S1, ESI†). As a result of the vdW correction, the binding energy between graphene and the Ag surface is greater than that between the PVP monomer group and the Ag surface until the surface ligand density is about 0.02 Å−2. Therefore, the vdW correction corroborates the results from the LDA calculations. A similar energy condition is also obtained in amine-passivated Ag nanocrystals (Text S1 and Fig. S1, S2, ESI†).23–26
In order to prepare graphene–nanocrystal heterostructures, the nanocrystal-deposited TEM grid is lifted from below the free-floating graphene of the water surface (Scheme 1). Then, the graphene covered TEM grid is placed onto filter paper to blot the water which breaks the suspended graphene downward so that the graphene covers the nanocrystals stuck on the side wall of the TEM grid bars. Finally, the graphene covered nanocrystals are dried slowly at ambient pressure and room temperature. We believe that the presence of surface ligands provides an initial buffer layer during drying to prevent the heterostructure from being kinetically trapped but finds the structure with the minimum free energy. We can expect that graphene competes with the existing surface ligands while the evaporation brings graphene close to the surface of Ag particles, and eventually, pushes the PVP ligands away from the interface and tightly coats the particle surface.
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| Scheme 1 Preparation of a TEM sample that exposes the nanocrystal/graphene interface parallel to the electron beam. | ||
The surface structure of the particle covered by graphene is remarkably different. Fig. 2b–d show the cross-sectional structure of the interface between Ag nanocrystals and graphene sheets with various numbers of graphene layers. Repeating bright and dark lines indicate 1 carbon-atom-thick graphene layers and interfaces between layers. In addition, each line frequently shows circular dots aligned along the line, which shows carbon atoms in the same sheet mutually aligned with the direction of the imaging electron beam. A comparison between the measured TEM images and the simulated cross-section image (inset of Fig. 2c) shows similarity between them, indicating that the lines in Fig. 2b–d are graphene sheets. By simply measuring contrast intensity along the cross-section, we are able to count the number of graphene layers covering the particles (Fig. 2e), which are 4–5 layers (Fig. 2b), 8 layers (Fig. 2c), and 18 layers (Fig. 2d). Multi-layer graphene with 4–5 layers (Fig. 2b) shows a curved cross-section, while more layers make the cross-section of each layer a straight line (Fig. 2c and d). The most interesting feature here is, however, that carbon sheets with different numbers of layers share a common structural aspect when they cover Ag nanocrystals: a tight contact on the particle surface is formed which replaces the space on the surface previously occupied by the PVP polymer ligands. The tight interface is confirmed by comparing the ligand-coated Ag nanocrystals – graphene interface with bare SiO2 particle – graphene interface prepared with the same protocol (Fig. S4, ESI†). This indicates that the attractive interaction between the graphene layer and the bare metal surface can overcome the passivation energy of the surface ligands as expected from DFT calculations. This is surprising considering that surface ligands cover the Ag nanocrystals with a thickness of a few nanometers in Fig. 2a. On the other hand, as expected from DFT calculations (Fig. 1a), a tight interface between graphene and nanocrystals is not readily formed when the ligand density is high (Fig. S5, ESI†), where the binding energy of the nanocrystals with the ligands per surface area is greater than that with the graphene.
We also investigate the entire heterostructure of the Ag nanocrystals and graphene attached to the Cu grid bar substrate. When lifting off the free-floating graphene from water with the particle decorated TEM grid, a small amount of water is captured between the particles and the graphene sheets which continuously dries out. This brings the graphene into contact with the particle surface. We dry the water slowly to promote the formation of a thermodynamically stable structure. Fig. 3a and c shows low magnification TEM images of the as-prepared heterostructures with two different thicknesses of graphene layers. When a particle is covered by thin graphene, which is presumably more elastic, the graphene forms a conformal wrap on a large portion of the exposed particle surface (Fig. 3a and b). Likewise, throughout the conformal wrap, the graphene layers and the particle surface form a tight contact (Fig. 3b) while leaving small open spaces near the corners of the graphene wrap between the substrate and graphene. The overall geometry results from the interplay of graphene-to-particle interactions, graphene-to-substrate interactions, and the mechanical properties of the graphene layers. Measuring the dimension of the wrapped structure (Fig. S6, ESI†) can be used to calculate the adhesion energy of the graphene to the Cu substrate.29 At equilibrium, the adhesion energy is given by
, with a geometrical factor λ = 1/16 and an elastic modulus E = 0.5 Tpa. With the average measurement for the thickness of the graphene sheet h (2.8 nm), the height w (44.8 nm), and the diameter of the structure a (116.1 nm) as shown in Fig. S6, ESI,† we obtain an adhesion energy of 1.9 J m−2. This value is greater than the adhesion energy measured from the AFM of graphene structures formed by a pressure difference induced delamination from the substrate (0.3–0.8 J m−2).7,30,31 This discrepancy is probably due to the evacuation of the gas molecules trapped in the open space between graphene and the substrate which promotes contraction of the graphene structure. The graphene stacking mode and the contact interface can also affect the adhesion between the graphene and the Cu substrate.32,33
Thicker graphitic carbon sheets with 18 layers form a less conformal contact with the exposed particle surface, and rather form a facetted cover composed of flat and tight contacts segmented by kinks with sharp angles. This observation is probably due to the relatively weaker adhesion of multi-layer graphene with the metal surface34 and the reduced elastic modulus of thicker graphitic sheets.35 Previous molecular dynamics simulation studies suggest the mechanism for bending induced delamination of multi-layer graphene stacked by van der Waals interaction.36 While bending the graphitic sheets, the inner layers and outer layers experience strain in the opposite directions. The coexistence of compressing and stretching strain in the graphitic sheets results in delamination of a few layers when the dimension parameter, a function of the number of layers and the bending curvature, exceeds a critical limit. Based on the theoretical study, the critical radius of curvature (Rc) in the given number of layers (N) is Rc ≈ 5.3N3/2, giving 42 nm, 119 nm, and 405 nm for graphitic sheets with 4, 8, and 18 layers, respectively.36 Since particles in our experimental study deviate from the perfect round shape used in the theory, these values only give a rough estimation for our observation. Nonetheless, knowing the Ag particle size is ∼50 nm in Fig. 2 and 3, we expect that graphitic carbon sheets with 18 layers deform by bending strain induced delamination (Fig. 3c and d). Thus, empty spaces near the tight, flat interfaces can be formed at the region near the particle/substrate/graphene interface and where the graphitic carbon sheets fail to conformally wrap due to its own mechanical properties.
We have observed the structure of the open spaces carefully with high-resolution TEM (Fig. 4). Interestingly, the open spaces in a size range of tens of nm show distinct features which indicates the presence of a dense amorphous material. It is probably densely packed PVP polymer chains. It has been reported that the PVP ligands are mobile on an Ag surface.37 As a result, during water evaporation induced interface formation, the mobile surface ligands are displaced by graphene to create a tight contact interface. The surface ligands are eventually concentrated in open spaces nearby. The size of the open spaces (tens of nm) containing the amorphous polymer material aggregates, which is much larger than the initial thickness of the polymer surface ligands (Fig. 2a, 1 to 2 nm), could provide a sufficient space to relocate PVP surface ligands.
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| Fig. 4 (a and b) Aberration-corrected high-resolution TEM images of the space surrounded by the Ag nanocrystal surface and graphene nearby the tight interface. | ||
Graphene sheet with 4 to 8 layers is synthesized by atmospheric chemical vapor deposition (APCVD) on a 25 μm thick copper foil. The copper foil is inserted into a quartz tube and heated to 1000 °C under 600 sccm Ar and 400 sccm H2 followed by annealing for 30 min. Then, a gas mixture of 1600 sccm Ar, 400 sccm H2, and 30 sccm CH4 is introduced for 15 min to synthesize the graphene sheet. After the synthesis is completed, fast cooling to room temperature with 300 sccm Ar is performed.
A graphene sheet with 15 to 18 layers is synthesized by the chemical vapor deposition method using copper foil at atmospheric pressure. The chamber is heated to 1000 °C under H2 gas (170 sccm) and annealed for 30 min. After annealing, H2 is reduced to 30 sccm and CH4 (1 sccm) and Ar (1000 sccm) are additionally introduced followed by 30 min of growth. After growth, the chamber is fast cooled (e ch °C min−1) to room temperature.
000) is dissolved in 1.5 mL ethylene glycol. Na2S solution is prepared by dissolving 11.2 mg of Na2S·9H2O in 1.55 mL ethylene glycol. For preparing AgNO3 solution, 0.122 g of AgNO3 is mixed with 2.5 mL ethylene glycol in the reaction vial previously wrapped with aluminum to avoid the photo-induced decomposition of AgNO3 before injecting into the reaction mixture. All the three solutions are used within three hours. After the vials containing ethylene glycol have been heated for 1 h, the cap is removed and 70 μL of Na2S solution is injected into ethylene glycol. After waiting for 10 min, the as-prepared PVP solution is pipetted into the reaction mixture. Immediately thereafter, 0.5 mL of AgNO3 is quickly injected into the solution while the cap is loosely placed back on top of the reaction vials. After 10 min, the reaction vial is removed from the heated oil bath and placed in a water bath held at room temperature. Once the reaction vials have cooled, Ag nanocrystals are separated by centrifugation and cleaned with clean water several times. As a control experiment, Ag nanocrystals with high ligand coverage are prepared via the ligand exchange of citrate-coated Ag nanocrystals by mixing the nanocrystals and PVP in a 1
g16 volume ratio and sonicating for 1 h.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c8cp05844j |
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