Photoluminescence from Liquid‐Exfoliated WS2 Monomers in Poly(Vinyl Alcohol) Polymer Composites |
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Authors: | Victor Vega‐Mayoral Claudia Backes Damien Hanlon Umar Khan Zahra Gholamvand Maria O'Brien Georg S. Duesberg Christoph Gadermaier Jonathan N. Coleman |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department for Complex Matter, Jozef Stefan Institute and Jozef Stefan International Postgraduate School, Ljubljana, Slovenia;2. School of Physics and CRANN & AMBER, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland;3. School of Chemistry and CRANN & AMBER, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland |
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Abstract: | While liquid phase exfoliation can be used to produce nanosheets stabilized in polymer solutions, very little is known about the resultant nanosheet size, thickness, or monolayer content. The present study uses semiquantitative spectroscopic metrics based on extinction, Raman, and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy to investigate these parameters for WS2 nanosheets exfoliated in aqueous poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) solutions. By measuring Raman and PL simultaneously, the monolayer content can be tracked via the PL/Raman intensity ratio while varying processing conditions. The PL is found to be maximized for a stabilizing polymer concentration of 2 g L?1. In addition, the monolayer content can be controlled via the centrifugation conditions, exceeding 5% by mass in some cases. These techniques have allowed tracking the ratio of PL/Raman in a droplet of polymer‐stabilized WS2 nanosheets as the water evaporates during composite formation. No evidence of nanosheet aggregation is found under these conditions although the PL becomes dominated by trion emission as drying proceeds and the balance of doping from PVA/water changes. Finally, bulk PVA/WS2 composites are produced by freeze drying where >50% of the monolayers remain unaggregated, even at WS2 volume fractions as high as 10%. |
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Keywords: | composites layered materials liquid exfoliation polymer stabilization transition metal dichalcogenides |
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