Blue photoluminescence from chemically derived graphene oxide
Goki Eda, Yun-Yue Lin, Cecilia Mattevi, Hisato Yamaguchi, Hsin-An, Chen, I-Sheng Chen, Chun-Wei Chen, and Manish Chhowalla

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates blue photoluminescence from solution-processed graphene oxide, revealing its potential for low-cost, solution-processable optoelectronic devices by engineering fluorescent components within graphene structures.
Contribution
It reports for the first time near-UV to blue photoluminescence from solution-processed graphene oxide and links it to localized electron-hole recombination in small sp2 clusters.
Findings
Blue PL depends on GO reduction level
PL originates from electron-hole recombination in sp2 clusters
Graphene provides a structural platform for fluorescent engineering
Abstract
Fluorescent organic compounds are of significant importance to the development of low-cost opto-electronic devices. Blue fluorescence from aromatic or olefinic molecules and their derivatives is particularly important for display and lighting applications. Thin film deposition of low-molecular-weight fluorescent organic compounds typically requires costly vacuum evaporation systems. On the other hand, solution-processable polymeric counterparts generally luminesce at longer wavelengths due to larger delocalization in the chain. Blue light emission from solution-processed materials is therefore of unique technological significance. Here we report near-UV to blue photoluminescence (PL) from solution-processed graphene oxide (GO). The characteristics of the PL and its dependence on the reduction of GO indicates that it originates from the recombination of electron-hole (e-h) pairs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene and Nanomaterials Applications
