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Creators/Authors contains: "Ghopry, Samar"

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  1. Abstract Nanohybrids based on van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures of two dimensional (2D) atomic materials have recently emerged as a unique scheme for designing high‐performance quantum sensors. This work explores vdW nanohybrids for photodetection, which consist of graphene decorated with intermingled transition‐metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) nanodiscs (TMDC‐NDs) obtained using wafer‐size, layer‐by‐layer growth. The obtained TMDC‐NDs/graphene nanohybrids take advantage of strong quantum confinement in graphene for high charge mobility and hence high photoconductive gain, and localized surface plasmonic resonance (LSPR) enabled on the TMDC‐NDs for enhanced light absorption. Since the LSPR depends on the nanostructure's size and density, intermingled TMDC‐NDs of different kinds of TMDCs, such as WS2(W) and MoS2(M), have been found to allow small‐size, high‐concentration TMDC‐NDs to be achieved for high photoresponse. Remarkably, high photoresponsivity up to 31 A/W (550 nm wavelength and 20 µW cm−2light intensity) has been obtained on the WMW‐NDs/graphene nanohybrids photodetectors made using three consecutive coatings of WS2(1st and 3rd coating) and MoS2(2nd coating), which is considerably higher by a factor of ≈4 than that of the counterparts MoS2‐ND/graphene or WS2‐NDs/graphene devices. This result provides a facile approach to control the size and concentration of the TMDC‐NDs for high‐performance, low‐cost optoelectronic device applications. 
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  2. Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is an important analytical tool with ultrahigh sensitivity that depends on electromagnetic mechanism (EM) and chemical mechanism (CM). The CM relies on efficient charge transfer between the probe molecules and SERS substrates, which means engineering the molecule attachment and the energy level alignment at the molecule/substrate interface is critical to optimal CM enhancement. Herein, we report enhanced CM of Rhodamine 6G (R6G) on graphene SERS substrates using combined C-band ultraviolet (UVC) irradiation and Pt nanoparticle (Pt-NPs) decoration using atomic layer deposition (ALD). An enhancement of 270% was obtained in the former, which is ascribed to the graphene surface activation and p-doping on graphene for improved R6G molecule attachment and charge transfer by its surface change from hydrophobic to hydrophilic and the down-shift of the Fermi energy (p-doping) after UVC exposure. The Pt-NPs decoration adds an additional enhancement of 250% by further p-doping graphene, which shifts the graphene’s Fermi energy to promote charge (hole) transfer at the R6G/graphene interface. Remarkably, the combination of the UVC irradiation and Pt-NPs decoration has led to enhanced R6G SERS sensitivity of 5 × 10−9 M, which represents a two-orders of magnitude enhancement over that on the pristine graphene and illustrates the importance of graphene engineering for optimal probe molecule attachment and the energy level alignment at the molecule/graphene interface toward achieving high-performance SERS biosensing. 
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  3. Nanohybrids of graphene and two-dimensional (2D) layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD) nanostructures can provide a promising substrate for extraordinary surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) due to the combined electromagnetic enhancement on TMD nanostructures via localized surface plasmonic resonance (LSPR) and chemical enhancement on graphene. In these nanohybrid SERS substrates, the LSPR on TMD nanostructures is affected by the TMD morphology. Herein, we report the first successful growth of MoS2 nanodonuts (N-donuts) on graphene using a vapor transport process on graphene. Using Rhodamine 6G (R6G) as a probe, SERS spectra were compared on MoS2 N-donuts/graphene nanohybrids substrates. A remarkably high R6G SERS sensitivity up to 2 × 10−12 M has been obtained, which can be attributed to the more robust LSPR effect than in other TMD nanostructures such as nanodiscs as suggested by the finite-difference time-domain simulation. This result demonstrates that non-metallic TMD/graphene nanohybrids substrates can have SERS sensitivity up to one order of magnitude higher than that reported on the plasmonic metal nanostructures/2D materials SERS substrates, providing a promising scheme for high-sensitivity, low-cost applications for biosensing. 
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