posted on 2018-01-10, 00:00authored byAlexandre Favron, Félix Antoine Goudreault, Vincent Gosselin, Julien Groulx, Michel Côté, Richard Leonelli, Jean-Francis Germain, Anne-Laurence Phaneuf-L’Heureux, Sébastien Francoeur, Richard Martel
Second-order Raman
scattering has been extensively studied in carbon-based
nanomaterials, for example, nanotube and graphene, because it activates
normally forbidden Raman modes that are sensitive to crystal disorder,
such as defects, dopants, strain, and so forth. The sp2-hybridized carbon systems are, however, the exception among nanomaterials,
where first-order Raman processes usually dominate. Here we report
the identification of four second-order Raman modes, named D1, D1′, D2 and D2′, in exfoliated black phosphorus (P(black)), an elemental
direct-gap semiconductor exhibiting strong mechanical and electronic
anisotropies. Located in close proximity to the Ag1 and Ag2 modes, these new modes dominate at an
excitation wavelength of 633 nm. Their evolutions as a function of
sample thickness, excitation wavelength, and defect density indicate
that they are defect-activated and involve high-momentum phonons in
a doubly resonant Raman process. Ab initio simulations of a monolayer
reveal that the D′ and D modes occur through intravalley scatterings
with split contributions in the armchair and zigzag directions, respectively.
The high sensitivity of these D modes to disorder helps explaining
several discrepancies found in the literature.