Engineering the physics and chemistry of 2D materials is a key to unlock the potential of the advanced e‐nose technologies limited by the current semiconductor technologies. Herein, the adjustment of the graphene's morphology, physics, and gas sensing properties upon its carboxylation via the developed photochemical method is demonstrated. Formation of matrices of nanoscale holes yet with the retention of the lamellar structure of the graphene layer is signified upon the introduction of up to 9.5 at% of carboxyl groups. The impact of the applied carboxylation on the conduction mechanism and electronic structure is demonstrated. The appearance of a set of the localized states in the valence band is revealed, originating from the molecular orbitals of carboxyls as is signified by the proposed approach for the identification of electronic states in graphene chemical derivatives. Given holey structure, predominance of highly affine carboxyls, and lateral inhomogeneity, the enhanced detection and discrimination of various alcohols, acetone, and ammonia vapors at room temperature is demonstrated. The opposite chemiresistive response toward ammonia in the humid air is also experimentally revealed and justified by the performed density functional theory modeling on the effect of ammonia, water, and their mix on electronic structure, and resistivity of the carboxylated graphene.
This paper studies holey graphene with various neck widths (the smallest distance between two neighbor holes). For the considered structures, the energy gap, the Fermi level, the density of electronic states, and the distribution of the local density of electronic states (LDOS) were found. The electroconductive properties of holey graphene with round holes were calculated depending on the neck width. It was found that, depending on the neck width, holey graphene demonstrated a semiconductor type of conductivity with an energy gap varying in the range of 0.01–0.37 eV. It was also shown that by changing the neck width, it is possible to control the electrical conductivity of holey graphene. The anisotropy of holey graphene electrical conductivity was observed depending on the direction of the current transfer.
The physicochemical nature of the amino group NH2’s landing on the basal plane of the graphene and on the edge atoms of the graphene nanomesh was revealed. The mechanism of covalent binding between the NH2 groups and the carbon atoms of the graphene and the GNM was discovered in silico by the SCC DFTB method. The maximum amount ratio of the amino groups to carbon atoms equaled 4.8% for GNM and 4.6% for the basal plane. The established values of the concentration and the trend of change in the work function of electrons are experimentally confirmed.
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