Sub-nanometer-thick native sp2 carbon on oxidized diamond surfaces
Oxygen-terminated diamond has a wide breadth of applications, which include stabilizing near-surface color centers, semiconductor devices, and biological sensors. Despite the vast literature on characterizing functionalization groups on diamond, the chemical composition on the shallowest portion of...
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Zusammenfassung: | Oxygen-terminated diamond has a wide breadth of applications, which include
stabilizing near-surface color centers, semiconductor devices, and biological
sensors. Despite the vast literature on characterizing functionalization groups
on diamond, the chemical composition on the shallowest portion of the surface
(< 1 nm) is challenging to probe with conventional techniques like XPS and
FTIR. In this work, we demonstrate the use of angle-resolved XPS to probe the
first ten nanometers of (100) single-crystalline diamond, showing the changes
of the oxygen functional groups and the allotropes of carbon with respect to
depth. With the use of consistent peak-fitting methods, the peak identities and
relative peak binding energies were identified for sp2 carbon, ether, hydroxyl,
carbonyl, and C-H groups. For the oxygen-terminated sample, we also quantified
the thickness of the sp2 carbon layer situated on top of the bulk sp3 diamond
bonded carbon to be 0.4 $\pm$ 0.1 nm, based on the analysis of the Auger
electron spectra and D-parameter calculations. These results indicate that the
majority of the oxygen is bonded to the sp2 carbon layer on the diamond, and
not directly on the sp3 diamond bonded carbon. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.06934 |