Abstract
Microscopic understanding of physical and electrochemical processes at electrolyte/electrode interfaces is critical for applications ranging from batteries, fuel cells to electrocatalysis. However, probing such buried interfacial processes is experimentally challenging. Infrared spectroscopy is sensitive to molecule vibrational signatures, yet to approach the interface three stringent requirements have to be met: interface specificity, sub-monolayer molecular detection sensitivity, and electrochemically stable and infrared transparent electrodes. Here we show that transparent graphene gratings electrode provide an attractive platform for vibrational spectroscopy at the electrolyte/electrode interfaces: infrared diffraction from graphene gratings offers enhanced detection sensitivity and interface specificity. We demonstrate the vibrational spectroscopy of methylene group of adsorbed sub-monolayer cetrimonium bromide molecules and reveal a reversible field-induced electrochemical deposition of cetrimonium bromide on the electrode controlled by the bias voltage. Such vibrational spectroscopy with graphene gratings is promising for real time and in situ monitoring of different chemical species at the electrolyte/electrode interfaces.
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Introduction
The electrolyte/electrode interface is of great interest for both fundamental science and applied technology: a rich variety of electrical field-dependent physical1,2,3 and chemical processes4,5 take place at this interface, which are important for applications such as supercapacitors6,7, batteries, fuel cells7,8 and electroplating9. However, microscopic understanding of the processes at electrolyte/electrode interfaces is quite limited due to lack of suitable experimental probing techniques1,3,4,10,11,12. For example, powerful surface techniques such as scanning tunnelling spectroscopy and many electron-based spectroscopy cannot access this interface. Optical spectroscopy can in principle probe buried interfaces and provide spectroscopic information of functional groups13,14,15, but its application in probing the electrolyte/electrode interface has to overcome several challenges: (1) both the electrolyte and conventional metal electrodes are opaque to infrared light16; (2) the interfacial signal can be easily overwhelmed by the bulk electrolyte signal; and (3) in situ detection with sub-monolayer sensitivity and surface specificity is difficult. In this paper, we report a new technique based on graphene gratings that overcomes these difficulties, which enables sensitive and interface-specific detection of molecular vibrations at the electrolyte/electrode interface. An infrared spectroscopy technique that overcomes all these difficulties will be a promising method for sensitive interface detection of molecules at the electrolyte/electrode interface.
Graphene is an attractive electrode for studies of electrolyte/electrode interfaces. It is stable and transparent to infrared light, and is being actively explored for applications in supercapacitors, batteries17, solar cells18 and displays19. In addition, the carrier concentration (or Fermi level) of graphene, a key electrode parameter for understanding the electric double layer and interfacial processes, can be directly determined through optical absorption spectroscopy20,21. A monolayer graphene grating further allows us to develop diffraction spectroscopy that greatly enhances the detection sensitivity of molecular vibrations and probes, specifically, molecules within the double layer at the electrolyte/electrode interface.
In this paper, we report a new vibrational spectroscopy technique based on diffraction of monolayer graphene gratings. This method overcomes the difficulties of probing buried interface with infrared, and enables sensitive and interface-specific detection of molecular vibrations spectra at the electrolyte/electrode interface. The advantages are demonstrated by detecting CH2 vibration peaks of polymer residue on graphene surface within seconds and the new spectroscopy enhances the relative contrast by ∼50 times compared with conventional absorption spectroscopy. Using the surfactant cetrimonium bromide (CTAB) as a model system, we observe CTAB adsorption on graphene and the reversible deposition/dissolution of CTAB at the graphene electrode with new diffraction vibrational spectroscopy.
Results
Diffraction spectroscopy design with graphene grating
The novel ‘diffraction spectroscopy’ based on graphene grating electrodes is designed to achieve high detection sensitivity and interfacial specificity study. The experimental scheme is illustrated in Fig. 1a. A femtosecond optical parametric amplifier is used as the light source, which produces tunable broadband infrared radiation with a bandwidth of ∼80 cm−1 and a repetition rate of 150 KHz. The infrared radiation is incident on a graphene grating electrode, which forms an electrochemical cell together with a platinum counter electrode and the aqueous electrolyte (Fig. 1a). To probe molecular species at the electrolyte/graphene electrode interface, we measure the first-order diffraction from the graphene grating rather than the transmission or reflection signal. Figure 1b shows the optical microscopy image of a typical graphene grating with 8 μm period on a fused silica substrate22. The diffraction signal originates from the periodic variation of optical susceptibility at the interface, which comes from not only the graphene grating itself but also the different adsorbed molecules and chemical species in the electrolyte double layer induced by the graphene electrode relative to that of the fused silica substrate (Fig. 1c). The bulk electrolyte solution beyond the nanometre-thick double layer region is homogeneous and contributes no diffraction signal. Therefore, this diffraction scheme provides excellent interface specificity.
In addition, the ‘diffraction spectroscopy’ greatly enhances the detection sensitivity of the electrode-induced changes of molecular concentration at the interface. In conventional infrared absorption spectroscopy, the transmitted light intensity It results from interference between the incident light and the forward scattering of molecular species, that is, It=|Ein+Emol|2≈|Ein|2+2·Re(Ein*·Emol), where Ein and Emol are the electrical field of incident light and molecular radiation, respectively, and |Emol|2 is omitted because |Emol|≪|Ein|. The relative intensity change due to light absorption is therefore determined by ΔIt/It≈2·Re(Ein*·Emol)/|Ein|2. For a monolayer of material, |Emol| from molecular vibration is typically <10−3 of Ein (ref. 23). So the absorption signal is usually ∼10−3 of the background light, and requires special infrared spectrometer and long-time average to obtain an absorption spectrum. In contrast, the diffracted signal is due to the interference between the diffraction of graphene electrode (Eg) and the periodic modulation of molecular species within the electrical double layer (Emol) (Fig. 1c). Therefore, the relative intensity change in the diffraction signal is ΔId/Id≈2·Re(Eg*·Emol)/|Eg|2. Because the diffracted electrical field from the graphene grating (Eg) is about 1% of the incident electrical field Ein (refs 24, 25), the relative contrast of the molecular vibration signal in diffraction spectra will be enhanced by almost two orders of magnitude compared with direct absorption spectroscopy. In principle, this technique can be extended to ultrathin film metal gratings. However, it is practically difficult to form sub-nanometre or 1 nm thin continuous metal films. For thicker films, the diffraction from metal will lead to a strong background and diminish the advantage of the diffraction spectroscopy.
Methylene stretching modes in diffraction spectroscopy
We demonstrate the capability of this vibrational spectroscopy based on graphene gratings by investigating CH2 stretching modes (within the spectral range of 2,800–3,000 cm−1) at the electrolyte/electrode interfaces in an electrochemical cell. The spectra of the diffracted infrared light from the graphene grating are taken with a two-dimensional InSb infrared camera.
First, we examine the diffraction signal Eg from the graphene grating electrode using 12 mM NaCl solution as the electrolyte. Figure 2a shows the diffraction intensity at 3,000 cm−1 as a function of the bias voltage from 1.1 to −0.4 V (black squares), which is normalized by the intensity value at the charge neutral point (CNP) of graphene. The diffraction intensity at 3,000 cm−1 contains contribution mainly from the graphene grating because this frequency is away from any molecular vibration resonances in this system. The bias voltage of the electrochemical cell acts as an electrical gate that controls carrier concentration in graphene. At Vbias=0 V graphene is strongly p-doped in the NaCl solution, and it becomes charge neutral at Vbias=1.0 V. We observe that the diffraction intensity shows a local maximum at the CNP, which decreases upon hole doping to ∼10% of the CNP signal at Vbias=0.5 V. Afterwards, the diffraction signal starts to increase with further hole doping. This non-monotonically change in infrared diffraction from the graphene grating originates from the gate-dependent complex optical conductivity in graphene20,21,26, since the first-order diffraction intensity from the graphene grating Ig is proportional to (Re(σg))2+(Im(σg))2, where Re(σg) and Im(σg) are the real and imaginary parts of graphene conductivity σg, respectively. Figure 2b displays the calculated Re(σg), Im(σg) and |σg|2 at 3,000 cm−1 as a function of the Fermi energy EF. Near the CNP, Re(σg) from interband transitions dominates the diffraction signal. Re(σg) decreases significantly when 2|EF| equals the incident photon energy due to Pauli blocking, and accounts for the reduced diffraction intensity from carrier doping initially. However, at high doping levels Im(σg) from intraband transitions starts to dominate, which ultimately leads to diffraction intensity increasing at high |EF|. The solid line in Fig. 2a shows the good agreement of this model with the experimental data and fitting details can be find in Supplementary Note 1 and Supplementary Table 1.
Next we show the infrared diffraction spectra (from 2,800 to 3,000 cm−1) from as-prepared graphene electrodes in the 12 mM NaCl solution at different bias voltages. Figure 2c shows the normalized diffraction spectra Id(ω)/IdCNP(ω), where IdCNP(ω), the spectrum at CNP, is used as the reference. We observed two sharp resonances at 2,916 and 2,848 cm−1 on top of a broad background signal. The broad background arises from the graphene electrode, which first decreases and then increases with higher hole doping controlled by Vbias. The two resonances at 2,916 and 2,848 cm−1 correspond to the anti-symmetric and symmetric stretching vibrations of the methylene group (-CH2-), respectively. A weak resonance at 2,960 cm−1 corresponding to methyl group (-CH3) is also present. The appearance of CH2 vibration peaks indicates that there are hydrocarbons on top of as-prepared graphene in NaCl solution, presumably due to the residue from the polymer transfer and/or photolithography processes. The diffraction spectra in Fig. 2c result from the interference between the graphene and CH2 vibration signals, and their understanding requires quantitative description of diffracted electrical field from both graphene and CH2 vibrations at different bias voltages. The normalized diffraction intensity is described by
where σg and σmol are the effective complex conductivity for graphene and the adsorbed molecules, respectively. σgCNP and σmolCNP are corresponding values near CNP. The derivation of equation (1) and the graphene complex conductivity σg is described in Supplementary Note 1 and in Supplementary Fig. 1, and the molecular responses from CH2 vibrations σmol can be described by a Lorenz model (Supplementary Note 2). We find that the experimental data can be well fitted by a constant amount of CH2 functional groups radiation interfering with the gate-dependent graphene radiation at different carrier concentration. Dashed silver lines in Fig. 2c show the fitting result using equation (1). Here we have used an averaged CH2 concentration of 1.1 × 1015 cm−2, as well as an oscillator strength of 1.372 and 0.63, respectively, for the CH2 anti-symmetric and symmetric stretching modes27. The change of line shape of the vibration resonance at different voltages is due to the interference between the molecular and graphene responses. More fitting details are discussed in Supplementary Note 2 and in Supplementary Fig. 2.
We note that the CH2 concentration corresponds to on average one CH2 group per unit cell in graphene, that is, an ‘effective’ monolayer coverage, although the actual distribution of hydrocarbon is likely to be randomly distributed with relatively large clusters. And this effective monolayer coverage leads to a change of diffraction intensity of ∼6% from the graphene grating (Fig. 2c). This is in contrast to only ∼10−3 change for monolayer CH2 absorption in conventional transmission measurements. Indeed, we observe the CH2 peaks from organic residue at 10−3 level in similarly prepared graphene samples using conventional Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy with hours of average. Using the diffraction spectroscopy with graphene gratings, the relative signal change is enhanced by ∼50 times, and it enables us to obtain monolayer CH2 absorption spectra within seconds.
Observation of adsorbed CTAB in the diffraction spectra
The vibrational spectroscopy based on graphene grating, with its high sensitivity and interface specificity, enables us to in situ monitor the accumulating process of molecular species at the electrolyte/graphene electrode interface. Here we use a cationic surfactant CTAB (CH3(CH2)15N(CH3)3Br) as a test system. CTAB have been widely used to assist DNA extraction28, gold nanoparticle synthesis29 and carbon nanotube dispersion30.
We plot in Fig. 2a (red squares) the gate-dependent diffraction signal at 3,000 cm−1 from the graphene grating in 11 mM CTAB solution. Compared with graphene in NaCl solution, the voltage dependence shows a similar behaviour except that the CNP is strongly shifted to Vbias=0.2 V. Apparently CTAB largely cancels the strong p-doping in as-prepared graphene, presumably due to the adsorption of cation CH3(CH2)15N(CH3)3+ ( abbreviated as CTA+) that induces a significant amount of electrons in graphene.
The diffraction spectra near CH2 vibration frequencies from the CTAB solution/graphene electrode interface at different bias voltages are shown in Fig. 2d. The CNP spectrum at Vbias=0.2 V is used as the reference. The spectra are reproducible in many cycles when the bias voltage is varied between −1 and 1.5 V, and there is a finite hysteresis when scanning direction switches. The bias-dependent spectra are quite similar to that in NaCl solution (Fig. 2c) except that the area of CH2 peak is two times larger. It indicates a higher CTAB concentration near the graphene electrode than that near bare fused silica substrate. A quantitative fitting of the spectra (dashed lines in Fig. 2d) can be achieved by assuming a constant excess CTAB molecule surface density of 1.9 × 1014 cm−2, corresponding to effectively 0.16 CTAB molecule per unit cell of graphene. The adsorbed CTAB molecules are likely to be disordered and isotropic since the spectral weight ratio for symmetric CH2 and anti-symmetric CH2 modes resembles that of isotropic ensemble of CTAB molecules.
Evolution of the diffraction spectra under large bias voltage
To observe CTAB concentration change at the electrolyte/electrode interface due to electrochemical deposition and dissolution, we extend the negative voltage scan range. Specifically, we scanned the bias voltage from 1.5 to −1.5 V, and then back to 1.5 V in 1.4 mM CTAB solution. Figure 3a shows the bias-dependent diffraction intensity at 3,000 cm−1, and Fig. 3b is the corresponding cyclic voltammetry curve (see also Supplementary Fig. 3). Figure 3c–f display the diffraction spectra when the Vbias is scanned from 1.5 to −1.5 V (Fig. 3c,d), then from −1.5 to 1.5 V (Fig. 3e,f). Here we focus on the anti-symmetric CH2 vibrations in the spectral range of 2,870–2,980 cm−1 and all the spectra are normalized by the initial CNP spectrum at Vbias=0.3 V.
When Vbias is varied between 1.5 and −1.2 V (Fig. 3c,d), the evolution of the spectra is similar to that in Fig. 2d, and it can be accounted for by the interference of graphene grating and a constant amount of CH2 groups at the interface. Spectra with electron or hole doping are largely symmetric because the graphene intrinsic response is symmetric. When Vbias reaches −1.5 V and starts to scan back, we see very different behaviour in the diffraction spectra as shown in Fig. 3e. First, we observe a strong increase in the overall diffraction intensity, indicating significant electrochemical deposition of materials at the graphene electrode. At the same time, we observe new spectral features emerging around 2,920 cm−1 (red arrow) and 2,944 cm−1 (blue arrows). The evolution of these spectra features as a function of electrical potential and their fittings are shown in Supplementary Note 3 and Supplementary Figure 4.
Previous studies of CTAB have shown that a new vibrational resonance around 2,943 cm−1 is associated with the head group of CH3-(N+) in crystalline CTAB31,32, and its presence indicates the formation of highly ordered CTAB at the graphene electrode. Therefore, our observed potential-dependent diffraction spectra changes indicate that once the Vbias reaches −1.5 V, a new electrochemical process is triggered to deposit highly ordered CTAB on the graphene electrode. This deposition process can be monitored in real time with our diffraction spectroscopy. When the bias voltage is further increased to positive, the deposited CTAB systematically modify the diffraction spectra. At the CNP with Vbias=0.2 V, the normalized spectrum shows distinct features rather than a constant. When Vbias is further scanned beyond 1 V, however, the features associated with the deposited CTAB layer become weaker and then disappears, and the spectral shape becomes similar to those in Fig. 3c,d. It indicates that the deposited CTAB layers are being dissolved at these bias voltages. The observed deposition and dissolution of CTAB layers is also monitored with the cyclic voltammetry curve in Fig. 3b, where we observe a significant increase of current at Vbias=−1.5 V in the negative scan, coincidence with the start of CTAB deposition, and a peak around Vbias=1 V in the positive scan, coincidence with the disappearing of CTAB deposition. After the Vbias reaches 1.5 V, most of the deposited CTAB is dissolved, and the graphene electrode recovers to its initial status. When Vbias is scanned from 1.5 to −1.5 V afterwards, the diffraction spectra display the same behaviour as that in Fig. 3c (see in Supplementary Fig. 5).
The origin of the observed electrochemical deposition and dissolution of CTAB layers is not clear yet. When the graphene electrode is acting as an anode at Vbias=−1.5 V, it can potentially oxide Br− into Br2 at the electrode. In this case, one may expect the corresponding CTA+ cation reduction and deposition in the platinum counter electrode. However, we observe the deposition of CTAB layers at the graphene electrode. Further theoretical investigation will be required to understand microscopically the unconventional deposition processes taking place at the interfaces.
Discussion
We demonstrated a vibration spectroscopy at the electrolyte/electrode interfaces using graphene grating electrodes. Its high detection sensitivity and interface specificity enables fast and in situ monitoring of molecular vibrations at the electrochemical interface. In this proof-of-principle study we used CH2 vibrations as an example, but the technique can be readily applied to other functional groups at different infrared frequency ranges. The diffraction spectroscopy enhances the relative contrast by ∼50 times compared with conventional absorption spectroscopy. Currently we demonstrate a sub-monolayer detection sensitivity, which is mainly limited by our laser fluctuation. With improved laser stability and/or balanced detection, we envision that the technique can probe as low as about 1% of a monolayer coverage and provides a powerful tool to investigate fundamental processes at the electrolyte/electrode interfaces in active electrochemical cells.
Methods
Sample preparation
In this experiment, graphene is grown on Cu foil by chemical vapour deposition method33 and then transferred to 0.5-mm thick fused silica substrates33. The periodical grating structure is patterned using standard photolithography and oxygen plasma etching22, and the graphene grating size is 7.5 × 7.5 mm. The electrolyte cell is constructed using Teflon and is thoroughly cleaned with acetone and ultrapure water before each measurement. All chemicals including NaCl and CTAB powder (99.99% purity) are obtained from Sigma-Aldrich.
Infrared spectroscopy
The infrared radiation is generated by a femtosecond laser source. Specifically, an amplified femtosecond laser system (Pharos, Light Conversion Ltd) delivers laser pulses at 1,026 nm with a pulse duration of 260 fs and a repetition rate of 150 KHz. The laser amplifier pumps a broadly tunable optical parametric amplifier (Orpheus, Light Conversion Ltd) covering wavelengths from 600 to 2,200 nm. The mid-infrared wavelengths are generated by mixing the pump laser (1,026 nm) and the optical parametric amplifier output through difference frequency generation. The output infrared beam at around 3,000 cm−1 is collimated and sent to graphene at normal incidence. The first-order diffraction light is around 25.9° to the normal. The diffraction light is sent to a liquid nitrogen-cooled InSb camera with128 × 128 pixel arrays. The wavelength is then calibrated by absorption of thin film CTAB with its Fourier transform infrared spectrum. The detailed spectroscopy design is shown in Supplementary Fig. 6.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Bie, Y.Q. et al. Vibrational Spectroscopy at Electrolyte/Electrode Interfaces with Graphene Gratings. Nat. Commun. 6:7593 doi: 10.1038/ncomms8593 (2015).
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Acknowledgements
The work was mainly supported by the National Science Foundation (DMR-1344302). Graphene synthesis and device fabrication were supported by the Office of Naval Research (award N00014- 13-1-0464). F.W. acknowledges support from a David and Lucile Packard fellowship. We thank H.A. Bechtel, H. L. Han and Y.R. Shen for useful discussion and suggestion.
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F.W. conceived the experiment; Y.-Q.B. and J.H. carried out the optical measurements; J.H. and L.J. fabricated the devices; Y.-Q.B., Q.Z. and A.Z. grew CVD graphene; Y.-Q.B., J.H., Z.S., D.Y and F.W. performed data analysis; D.Y and F.W. supervised the experiments. All the authors discussed the results and wrote the manuscript.
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Supplementary Figures 1-6, Supplementary Table 1, Supplementary Notes 1-3 and Supplementary References (PDF 1264 kb)
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Bie, YQ., Horng, J., Shi, Z. et al. Vibrational spectroscopy at electrolyte/electrode interfaces with graphene gratings. Nat Commun 6, 7593 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8593
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8593
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