Back to Search Start Over

Charge transfer and weak bonding between molecular oxygen and graphene zigzag edges at low temperatures

Authors :
Boukhvalov, D. W.
Osipov, V. Yu.
Shames, A. I.
Takai, K.
Hayashi, T.
Enoki, T.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) study of air-physisorbed defective carbon nano-onions evidences in favor of microwave assisted formation of weakly-bound paramagnetic complexes comprising negatively-charged O2- ions and edge carbon atoms carrying pi-electronic spins. These complexes being located on the graphene edges are stable at low temperatures but irreversibly dissociate at temperatures above 50-60 K. These EPR findings are justified by density functional theory (DFT) calculations demonstrating transfer of an electron from the zigzag edge of graphene-like material to oxygen molecule physisorbed on the graphene sheet edge. This charge transfer causes changing the spin state of the adsorbed oxygen molecule from S = 1 to S = 1/2 one. DFT calculations show significant changes of adsorption energy of oxygen molecule and robustness of the charge transfer to variations of the graphene-like substrate morphology (flat and corrugated mono- and bi-layered graphene) as well as edges passivation. The presence of H- and COOH- terminated edge carbon sites with such corrugated substrate morphology allows formation of ZE-O2- paramagnetic complexes characterized by small (<50 meV) binding energies and also explains their irreversible dissociation as revealed by EPR.<br />Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted in Carbon journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1606.02870
Document Type :
Working Paper