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      The Effect of Humidity on the Interlayer Interaction of Bi-layer Graphene

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          Abstract

          The lubricating ability of graphite largely depends on the environmental humidity, essentially the amount of water in between its layers. In general, intercalated molecules in layered materials modify their extraordinary properties by interacting with the layers. To understand the interaction of intercalated water molecules with graphene layers, we performed Raman measurements on bi-layer graphene at various humidity levels and observed an additional peak close to that of the low-frequency layer breathing mode between two graphene layers. The additional peak is attributed to the vibration between an intercalated water layer and the graphene layers. We further propose that the monolayer coverage of water increases between bilayer graphene with increasing environmental humidity while the interaction between the water layer and graphene layers remains approximately unchanged, until too much water is intercalated to keep the monolayer structure, at just over 50\% relative humidity. Notably, the results suggest that unexpectedly humidity could be an important factor affecting the properties of layered materials, as it significantly modifies the interlayer interaction.

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          Most cited references2

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          Tunable bandgap in graphene by the controlled adsorption of water molecules.

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            Physics. Surface transfer doping of semiconductors.

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              25 September 2018
              Article
              1809.09515
              607bbb97-81a3-4b60-9c72-44bfd8ae5242

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

              History
              Custom metadata
              6 pages, 5 figures
              cond-mat.mtrl-sci

              Condensed matter
              Condensed matter

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