Molecular and electronic structures and magnetic properties of multilayer graphene nanoclusters and their changes under the influence of adsorbed molecules


Дәйексөз келтіру

Толық мәтін

Ашық рұқсат Ашық рұқсат
Рұқсат жабық Рұқсат берілді
Рұқсат жабық Тек жазылушылар үшін

Аннотация

The results of investigations of the structures and properties of multilayer graphene nano-clusters (nanographites), structural blocks of activated carbon fibers, and their changes under the influence of adsorbed molecules are presented. The presence of specific edge p-electron-ic states in the nanographites and a reversible decrease in their density at the Fermi level upon the interaction of the graphite nanoparticles with adsorbed molecules of oxygen, chlorine, and water were found. The explanation of the discovered effect was proposed in the terms of the model of spin splitting of edge p-electronic states initiated by the transfer of a small fraction of the electron density from the nanographites to adsorbed molecules. The change in the sign of the temperature coefficient of current carrier spin relaxation rate in the presence of adsorbates can be accounted for by their interaction with edge spin-split (magnetically ordered) states. The preservation of peripheral p-electronic states of the nanographites of free (dangling) s-orbitals of edge carbon atoms at saturation with chlorine was substantiated.

Авторлар туралы

A. Ziatdinov

Institute of Chemistry, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Хат алмасуға жауапты Автор.
Email: ziatdinov@ich.dvo.ru
Ресей, 159 prosp. 100 let Vladivostoku, Vladivostok, 690022

N. Saenko

Institute of Chemistry, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: ziatdinov@ich.dvo.ru
Ресей, 159 prosp. 100 let Vladivostoku, Vladivostok, 690022

P. Skrylnik

Institute of Chemistry, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: ziatdinov@ich.dvo.ru
Ресей, 159 prosp. 100 let Vladivostoku, Vladivostok, 690022

Қосымша файлдар

Қосымша файлдар
Әрекет
1. JATS XML

© Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, 2017