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Boron-Doped Reduced Graphene Oxide with Tunable Bandgap and Enhanced Surface Plasmon Resonance

About this Digital Document

Graphene and its hybrids are being employed as potential materials in light-sensing devices due to their high optical and electronic properties. However, the absence of a bandgap in graphene limits the realization of devices with high performance. In this work, a boron-doped reduced graphene oxide (B-rGO) is proposed to overcome the above problems. Boron doping enhances the conductivity of graphene oxide and creates several defect sites during the reduction process, which can play a vital role in achieving high-sensing performance of light-sensing devices. Initially, the B-rGO is synthesized using a modified microwave-assisted hydrothermal method and later analyzed using standard FESEM, FTIR, XPS, Raman, and XRD techniques. The content of boron in doped rGO was found to be 6.51 at.%. The B-rGO showed a tunable optical bandgap from 2.91 to 3.05 eV in the visible spectrum with an electrical conductivity of 0.816 S/cm. The optical constants obtained from UV-Vis absorption spectra suggested an enhanced surface plasmon resonance (SPR) response for B-rGO in the theoretical study, which was further verified by experimental investigations. The B-rGO with tunable bandgap and enhanced SPR could open up the solution for future high-performance optoelectronic and sensing applications.

Contributor(s)
Publisher
MDPI AG
Date Issued
2020-08-11
Language
English
Type
Genre
Form
electronic document
Media type
Creator role
Faculty
Identifier
1420-3049
Has this item been published elsewhere?
Volume
25
Volume
16
Junaid, . M., Khir, . M. H. M., Witjaksono, . G., Tansu, . N., Saheed, . M. S. M., Kumar, . P., Ullah, . Z., Yar, . A., & Usman, . F. (2020). (Vols. 16). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163646
Junaid, Muhammad, M. H. Md Khir, Gunawan Witjaksono, Nelson Tansu, Mohamed Shuaib Mohamed Saheed, Pradeep Kumar, Zaka Ullah, Asfand Yar, and Fahad Usman. 2020. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163646.
Junaid, Muhammad, et al. 11 Aug. 2020, https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163646.