Journal ArticleDOI
Raman spectroscopy in graphene
TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss the first-order and double resonance Raman scattering mechanisms in graphene, which give rise to the most prominent Raman features and give special emphasis to the possibility of using Raman spectroscopy to distinguish a monolayer from few-layer graphene stacked in the Bernal configuration.About:
This article is published in Physics Reports.The article was published on 2009-04-01. It has received 4945 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Bilayer graphene & Raman spectroscopy.read more
Citations
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Graphene and Graphene Oxide: Synthesis, Properties, and Applications
TL;DR: An overview of the synthesis, properties, and applications of graphene and related materials (primarily, graphite oxide and its colloidal suspensions and materials made from them), from a materials science perspective.
Journal ArticleDOI
Raman spectroscopy as a versatile tool for studying the properties of graphene
Andrea C. Ferrari,Denis M. Basko +1 more
TL;DR: The state of the art, future directions and open questions in Raman spectroscopy of graphene are reviewed, and essential physical processes whose importance has only recently been recognized are described.
Journal ArticleDOI
Atomically precise bottom-up fabrication of graphene nanoribbons
Jinming Cai,Pascal Ruffieux,Rached Jaafar,Marco Bieri,Thomas Braun,Stephan Blankenburg,Matthias Muoth,Ari P. Seitsonen,Ari P. Seitsonen,Moussa Saleh,Xinliang Feng,Klaus Müllen,Roman Fasel,Roman Fasel +13 more
TL;DR: Cai et al. as discussed by the authors used a surface-assisted coupling of the precursors into linear polyphenylenes and their subsequent cyclodehydrogenation to produce GNRs of different topologies and widths.
Journal ArticleDOI
Perspectives on Carbon Nanotubes and Graphene Raman Spectroscopy
TL;DR: Raman spectroscopy is shown to provide a powerful tool to differentiate between two different sp(2) carbon nanostructures (carbon nanotubes and graphene) which have many properties in common and others that differ.
Atomically Precise Bottom-up Fabrication of Graphene Nanoribbons JINMING CAI, Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
Rached Jaafar,Marco Bieri,Thomas Braun,Stephan Blankenburg,Matthias Muoth,Ari P. Seitsonen,Moussa Saleh,Ivan Shorubalko,Shuping Pang,Roman Fasel +9 more
TL;DR: This work reports a simple method for the production of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons of different topologies and widths, which uses surface-assisted coupling of molecular precursors into linear polyphenylenes and their subsequent cyclodehydrogenation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Raman spectroscopy of graphene and graphite: Disorder, electron phonon coupling, doping and nonadiabatic effects
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the origin of the D and G peaks and the second order of D peak and show that the G and 2 D Raman peaks change in shape, position and relative intensity with number of graphene layers.
Book
Physical properties of carbon nanotubes
TL;DR: In this paper, an introductory textbook for graduate students and researchers from various fields of science who wish to learn about carbon nanotubes is presented, focusing on the basic principles behind the physical properties and giving the background necessary to understand the recent developments.
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Energy band-gap engineering of graphene nanoribbons.
TL;DR: It is found that the energy gap scales inversely with the ribbon width, thus demonstrating the ability to engineer the band gap of graphene nanostructures by lithographic processes.
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Electronic Confinement and Coherence in Patterned Epitaxial Graphene
Claire Berger,Claire Berger,Zhimin Song,Xuebin Li,Xiaosong Wu,Nate Brown,Cécile Naud,Didier Mayou,Tianbo Li,J. Hass,Alexei Marchenkov,Edward H. Conrad,Phillip N. First,Walt A. de Heer,Walt A. de Heer +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a single epitaxial graphene layer at the silicon carbide interface is shown to reveal the Dirac nature of the charge carriers, and all-graphene electronically coherent devices and device architectures are envisaged.
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Chemically Derived, Ultrasmooth Graphene Nanoribbon Semiconductors
TL;DR: A chemical route to produce graphene nanoribbons with width below 10 nanometers was developed, as well as single ribbons with varying widths along their lengths or containing lattice-defined graphene junctions for potential molecular electronics.