2017
DOI: 10.1088/2053-1583/aa702c
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Key role of rotated domains in oxygen intercalation at graphene on Ni(1 1 1)

Abstract: Herein, we provide a complete description of the intercalation of oxygen at the strongly interacting graphene on Ni(111), highlighting the role of rotated graphene domains in triggering the intercalation. High-resolution core-level photoelectron spectroscopy provided a full characterization of the interface at each stage of the intercalation, revealing the formation of an oxide layer between graphene and the metal substrate. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements showed that the oxide decouples… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…Due to the lattice match of graphene and Ni(111) (the difference is approximately 1%), LEED and STM of the gr/Ni(111) system demonstrate (1 × 1) in-plane periodicities indicating also the high quality of this system on the large and the atomic scale. The number of defects in the graphene layer for this system is very small; however, some areas associated with the presence of the Ni 2 C phase (small scale STM images of this area are not shown here) can be detected on the surface; this is also supported by the XPS data and consistent with the previously published results for the same system [30][31][32]. The LEED and STM images of the system obtained after intercalation of Mn in gr/Ni(111) demonstrate (2 × 2) periodicities with respect to the ones of the parent system ( Fig.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Due to the lattice match of graphene and Ni(111) (the difference is approximately 1%), LEED and STM of the gr/Ni(111) system demonstrate (1 × 1) in-plane periodicities indicating also the high quality of this system on the large and the atomic scale. The number of defects in the graphene layer for this system is very small; however, some areas associated with the presence of the Ni 2 C phase (small scale STM images of this area are not shown here) can be detected on the surface; this is also supported by the XPS data and consistent with the previously published results for the same system [30][31][32]. The LEED and STM images of the system obtained after intercalation of Mn in gr/Ni(111) demonstrate (2 × 2) periodicities with respect to the ones of the parent system ( Fig.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…[ 35 ] In such a way, initial states depend mainly on the valence charge of the atom (i.e., the transferred charge from the chemical environment that constitute the so called doping for graphene) and the Madelung energy. There are some reports [ 36,37 ] that interpreted the C 1s shift of graphene only in terms of these initial states, in particular from the variation of the doping. However, it constitutes an oversimplified explanation.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to that, we assign the new component appearing at 284.6 eV in C 1s XPS spectrum to sp 2 states of decoupled graphene from copper due to the presence of a Cu 2 O layer. This assignment is a little bit risky as, according to the literature, the decoupling of the graphene monolayer previously coupled on other metals like Ni, [ 36–38 ] Pt, Ir, Rh, [ 39 ] produces a shift of the C1s XPS peak toward lower binding energies. The interpretation of this shift was done in terms of charge transfer, that is, the decoupling of the graphene layer avoids charge transfer from metal to graphene, thus varying the initial state of the C 1s XPS peak by moving to lower binding energies.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…58 Second: When O2 intercalates between a 2D material and their substrate, the 2D material decouples from the substrate and behaves more "free standing". [213][214][215][216][217][218][219] Third: Lithium forms itself into a superdense crystal when intercalated between bilayer graphene, disrupting the tBLG properties. 64 Optical image of a laser-written pattern on a Bi2Se3/MoS2 2D heterostructure.…”
Section: Controlled Intercalationmentioning
confidence: 99%