Rigorous and Accurate Contrast Spectroscopy for Ultimate Thickness Determination of Micrometer-Sized Graphene on Gold and Molecular Sensing

Joel M. Katzen, Matěj Velický, Yuefeng Huang, Stacey Drakeley, William Hendren, Robert M. Bowman, Qiran Cai, Ying Chen, Lu Hua Li, Fumin Huang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The thickness of graphene films can be accurately determined by optical contrast spectroscopy. However, this becomes challenging and complicated when the flake size reduces to the micrometer scale, where the contrast spectrum is sensitively dependent on the polarization and incident angle of light. Here, we report accurate measurement of the optical contrast spectra of micrometer-sized few-layer graphene flakes on Au substrate. Using a high-resolution optical microscopy with a 100× magnification objective, we accurately determined the layer numbers of flakes as small as one micrometer in lateral size. We developed a theoretical model to accurately take into account the appropriate contribution of light incident at various angles and polarizations, which matched the experimental results extremely well. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the optical contrast spectroscopy is highly sensitive to detect the adsorption of submonolayer airborne hydrocarbon molecules, which can reveal whether graphene is contaminated. Though the technique was demonstrated on graphene, it can be readily generalized to many other two-dimensional materials, which opens new avenues for developing miniaturized and ultrasensitive label-free molecular sensors.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)22520-22528
Number of pages9
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume10
Issue number26
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Jul 2018

Keywords

  • airborne contamination
  • gold
  • graphene
  • molecular sensor
  • optical contrast

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