Oxygen vacancy density-dependent transformation from infrared to Raman active vibration mode in SnO_2 nanostructures
Article 2011 en
Authors
TL
T. H. Li
LL
Lizhe Liu
XL
X. X. Li
Abstract
1 min read
Raman spectra acquired from spherical, cubic, and cuboid SnO2 nanocrystals (NCs) reveal a morphologically independent Raman mode at ∼302 cm(-1). The frequency of this mode is slightly affected by the NC size, but the intensity increases obviously with decreasing NC size. By considering the dipole changes induced by oxygen vacancies and derivation based on the density functional theory and phonon confinement model, an oxygen vacancy density larger than 6% is shown to be responsible for the transformation of the IR to Raman active vibration mode, and the intensity enhancement is due to strong phonon confinement.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.