posted on 2024-01-03, 21:50authored byViet Bac T. Phung, Thi Nhan Tran, Quang Huy Tran, Thi Theu Luong, Van An Dinh
The adsorption mechanism
of individual volatile organic compounds
(VOCs) on the surface of graphene is investigated using nonempirical
van der Waals (vdW) density functional theory. The VOCs chosen as
adsorbates are ethanol, benzene, and toluene, which are found in the
exhaled breath of lung cancer patients. The most energetically favorable
configurations of the adsorbed systems, adsorption energy profiles,
charge transfer, and work function are calculated. The fundamental
insight into the interactions between the considered VOC molecules
and graphene through molecular doping, i.e., charge transfer, is estimated.
It is found that the adsorption energy is highly sensitive to the
vdW functionals. Adsorption energies calculated by revPBE-vdW are
in good agreement with the available experimental data, and the revPBE-vdW
functional can cover well the physical phenomena behind the adsorption
of these VOCs on graphene. Bader charge analysis shows that 0.064,
0.042, and 0.061e of charge were transferred from the graphene surface
to ethanol, benzene, and toluene, respectively. All of the considered
VOCs act as electron acceptors from graphene. By analyzing the electronic
structure of the adsorption systems, we found that the energy level
of the highest occupied molecular orbitals of these considered VOCs
is shifted backward toward the Fermi level. The interaction of the
VOCs with the π and π* states of the C atoms in graphene
breaks the symmetry of graphene, leading to the opening of a band
gap at the Fermi level. The adsorption of these considered VOCs onto
the pristine graphene produces a band gap of 5–12 meV.