Single atoms and metal nanoclusters anchored to graphene vacancies

Alberto Trentino, Georg Zagler, Manuel Längle, Jacob Madsen, Toma Susi, Clemens Mangler, E. Harriet Åhlgren, Kimmo Mustonen, Jani Kotakoski (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Fabricating dispersed single atoms and size-controlled metal nanoclusters remains a difficult challenge due to sintering. Here, we demonstrate that atoms and clusters can be immobilized using atomically clean defect-engineered graphene as the matrix. The graphene is first cleaned of surface contamination with laser heating, after which low-energy Ar irradiation is used to create spatially well-separated vacancies into it. Metal atoms are then evaporated either via thermal or ebeam evaporation onto graphene, where they diffuse until being trapped into a vacancy. The density of embedded structures can be controlled through irradiation dose, and the size of the structures through evaporation time. The resulting structures are confirmed through atomic-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy and electron energy loss spectroscopy. We demonstrate here incorporation of Al, Ti, Fe, Ag and Au single atoms or nanoclusters, but the method should work equally well for other elements.
Original languageEnglish
Article number103667
Number of pages7
JournalMicron
Volume184
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sep 2024

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 210004 Nanomaterials
  • 103042 Electron microscopy

Keywords

  • Defect-engineering
  • Electron microscopy
  • Graphene
  • Impurity substitution
  • Nanoclusters
  • Single-atom catalysts

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