Raman Radiation Patterns of Graphene.

ACS Nano

Department Chemie & CeNS, LMU Munich , Butenandtstr. 5-13E, 81377 Munich, Germany.

Published: February 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the angular distribution of G and 2D Raman scattering from graphene on glass using back focal plane patterns, showcasing how G emission can be modeled with two incoherent dipoles in the graphene plane.
  • It finds that the 2D Raman emission can be represented either by three incoherent dipoles at 120° angles or by two orthogonal dipoles in a 3:1 ratio, aligning well with experimental patterns.
  • The research also highlights how the polarization ratios and intensity ratios depend on the microscope's numerical aperture, due to light depolarization effects when graphene is placed on a dielectric substrate, impacting the quantitative analysis of Raman intensities in microscopy.

Article Abstract

We report the angular distribution of the G and 2D Raman scattering from graphene on glass by detecting back focal plane patterns. The G Raman emission can be described by a superposition of two incoherent orthogonal point dipoles oriented in the graphene plane. Due to double resonant Raman scattering, the 2D emission can be represented by the sum of either three incoherent dipoles oriented 120° with respect to each other, or two orthogonal incoherent ones with a 3:1 weight ratio. Parameter-free calculations of the G and 2D intensities are in excellent agreement with the experimental radiation patterns. We show that the 2D polarization ratio and the 2D/G intensity ratio depend on the numerical aperture of the microscope objective. This is due to the depolarization of the emission and excitation light when graphene is on a dielectric substrate, as well as to tight focusing. The polarization contrast decreases substantially for increasing collection angle, due to polarization mixing caused by the air-dielectric interface. This also influences the intensity ratio I(2D)/I(G), a crucial quantity for estimating the doping in graphene. Our results are thus important for the quantitative analysis of the Raman intensities in confocal microscopy. In addition, they are relevant for understanding the influence of signal enhancing plasmonic antenna structures, which typically modify the sample's radiation pattern.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4768291PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5b06631DOI Listing

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