April 18, 2018
Journal Article

Formation of Supported Graphene Oxide: Evidence for Enolate Species

Abstract

Graphene oxides are promising materials for novel electronic devices or anchoring of the active sites for catalytic applications. Here we focus on understanding the oxygen binding on different regions of graphene (Gr) on Ru(0001). Differences in the Gr/Ru lattices result in the superstructure, which offers an array of distinct adsorption sites. We employ scanning tunneling microscopy and density functional theory to map out the chemical identity and stability of prepared oxygen functionalities in different Gr regions. We demonstrate that in the regions that are close to the metal substrate, the terminally-bonded enolate groups are strongly preferred over bridge-bonded epoxy configurations. No oxygen species are observed on the graphene regions that are far from the underlying Ru, indicating their low relative stability. This study provides a clear fundamental basis for understanding the structural and electronic factors that affect the stability of enolate and epoxy species as a function of Gr/Ru interactions.

Revised: January 22, 2021 | Published: April 18, 2018

Citation

Novotny Z., M. Nguyen, F.P. Netzer, V. Glezakou, R.J. Rousseau, and Z. Dohnalek. 2018. Formation of Supported Graphene Oxide: Evidence for Enolate Species. Journal of the American Chemical Society 140, no. 15:5102-5109. PNNL-SA-127157. doi:10.1021/jacs.7b12791