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Abstract
An efficient route to synthesize macroscopic amounts of graphene is highly desired and bulk characterization of such samples, in terms of the number of layers, is equally important. We present a Raman spectroscopy-based method to determine the typical upper limit of the number of graphene layers in chemically exfoliated graphene. We utilize a controlled vapour-phase potassium intercalation technique and identify a lightly doped stage, where the Raman modes of undoped and doped few-layer graphene flakes coexist. The spectra can be unambiguously distinguished from alkali doped graphite, and modeling with the typical upper limit of the layers yields an upper limit of flake thickness of five layers with a significant single-layer graphene content. Complementary statistical AFM measurements on individual few-layer graphene flakes find a consistent distribution of the layer numbers.
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1 Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; Department of Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics and MTA-BME Lendület Spintronics Research Group (PROSPIN), Budapest, Hungary; Laboratory of Physics of Complex Matter, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
2 Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; Department of Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics and MTA-BME Lendület Spintronics Research Group (PROSPIN), Budapest, Hungary
3 Yachay Tech University, School of Physical Sciences and Nanotechnology, Urcuquí, Ecuador; Institut für Experimental Physik, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany
4 Department of Chemistry and Pharmacy and Joint Institute of Advanced Materials and Processes (ZMP), Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany
5 Laboratory of Physics of Complex Matter, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
6 Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
7 Department of Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics and MTA-BME Lendület Spintronics Research Group (PROSPIN), Budapest, Hungary