posted on 2016-04-27, 00:00authored byLoïc Huder, Corentin Rinfray, Denis Rouchon, Anass Benayad, Mira Baraket, Guillaume Izzet, Felipe Lipp-Bregolin, Gérard Lapertot, Lionel Dubois, Anna Proust, Louis Jansen, Florence Duclairoir
The
interfacing of polyoxometalates and graphene can be considered
to be an innovative way to generate hybrid structures that take advantage
of the properties of both components. Polyoxometalates are redox-sensitive
and photosensitive compounds with high temperature stability (up to
400 °C for some), showing tunable properties depending on the
metal incorporated inside the complex. Graphene has a unique electronic
band structure combined with good material properties for electrical
and optical applications. The spontaneous, rather than electrochemical,
functionalization of epitaxial graphene on SiC with Keggin phosphomolybdate
derivative TBA3[PMo11O39{Sn(C6H4)CC(C6H4)N2}] (named KMoSn[N2+]) bearing a phenyl diazonium unit is investigated. Graphene decoration
is evidenced by means of AFM, Raman, XPS, and cyclic voltammetry,
indicating a successful immobilization of the polyoxomolybdate. The
covalent bonding of the polyoxometalate to the graphene substrate
can be deduced from the appearance of a D band in the Raman spectra
and from the loss of mobility in the electrical conduction. High-resolution
XPS spectra reveal an electron transfer from the graphene to the Mo
complex. The comparison of charge-carrier density measurements before
and after grafting supports the p-type doping effect, which is further
evidenced by work function UPS measurements.