Demonstrating and Unraveling a Controlled Nanometer-Scale Expansion of the Vacancy Defects in Graphene by CO2

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2022 Apr 25;61(18):e202200321. doi: 10.1002/anie.202200321. Epub 2022 Mar 16.

Abstract

A controlled manipulation of graphene edges and vacancies is desired for molecular separation, sensing and electronics applications. Unfortunately, available etching methods always lead to vacancy nucleation making it challenging to control etching. Herein, we report CO2 -led controlled etching down to 2-3 Å per minute while completely avoiding vacancy nucleation. This makes CO2 a unique etchant for decoupling pore nucleation and expansion. We show that CO2 expands the steric-hindrance-free edges with an activation energy of 2.71 eV, corresponding to the energy barrier for the dissociative chemisorption of CO2 . We demonstrate the presence of an additional configurational energy barrier for nanometer-sized vacancies resulting in a significantly slower rate of expansion. Finally, CO2 etching is applied to map the location of the intrinsic vacancies in the polycrystalline graphene film where we show that the intrinsic vacancy defects manifest mainly as grain boundary defects where intragrain defects from oxidative etching constitute a minor population.

Keywords: CO2 Based Etching; Grain-Boundary Defects; Intrinsic Vacancy Defects; Single-Layer Graphene; Vacancy Defects; Vacancy Expansion; Vacancy Nucleation.