Graphene has attracted a lot of research interest owing to its exotic properties and a wide spectrum of potential applications. Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) from gaseous hydrocarbon sources has shown great promises for large-scale graphene growth. However, high growth temperature, typically 1000 °C, is required for such growth. Here we demonstrate a revised CVD route to grow graphene on Cu foils at low temperature, adopting solid and liquid hydrocarbon feedstocks. For solid PMMA and polystyrene precursors, centimeter-scale monolayer graphene films are synthesized at a growth temperature down to 400 °C. When benzene is used as the hydrocarbon source, monolayer graphene flakes with excellent quality are achieved at a growth temperature as low as 300 °C. The successful low-temperature growth can be qualitatively understood from the first principles calculations. Our work might pave a way to an undemanding route for economical and convenient graphene growth.
Graphene has attracted intense research interest due to its exotic properties and potential applications. Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on Cu foils has shown great promises for macroscopic growth of high-quality graphene. By delicate design and control of the CVD conditions, here we demonstrate that a nonequilibrium steady state can be achieved in the gas phase along the CVD tube, that is, the active species from methane cracking increase in quantity, which results in a thickness increase continually for graphene grown independently at different positions downstream. In contrast, uniform monolayer graphene is achieved everywhere if Cu foils are distributed simultaneously with equal distance in the tube, which is attributed to the tremendous density shrink of the active species in the gas phase due to the sink effect of the Cu substrates. Our results suggest that the gas-phase reactions and dynamics are critical for the CVD growth of graphene and further demonstrate that the graphene thickness from the CVD growth can be fine-tuned by controlling the gasphase dynamics. A similar strategy is expected to be feasible to control the growth of other nanostructures from gas phases as well.
London dispersion force is ubiquitous in nature, and is increasingly recognized to be an important factor in a variety of surface processes. Here we demonstrate unambiguously the decisive role of London dispersion force in non-equilibrium growth of ordered nanostructures on metal substrates using aromatic source molecules. Our first-principles based multi-scale modeling shows that a drastic reduction in the growth temperature, from ,10006C to ,3006C, can be achieved in graphene growth on Cu(111) when the typical carbon source of methane is replaced by benzene or p-Terphenyl. The London dispersion force enhances their adsorption energies by about (0.5-1.8) eV, thereby preventing their easy desorption, facilitating dehydrogenation, and promoting graphene growth at much lower temperatures. These quantitative predictions are validated in our experimental tests, showing convincing demonstration of monolayer graphene growth using the p-Terphenyl source. The general trends established are also more broadly applicable in molecular synthesis of surface-based nanostructures. , and molecular assembly at surfaces 6,7 . To a large extent, such advances through quantitative definitive studies were enabled by the availability of more accurate descriptions of the weak interactions associated with long-range electron correlation effects within first-principles approaches [8][9][10] . In this study, we exploit the power of predictive modeling using state-of-the-art first-principles calculations within density functional theory (DFT), coupled with kinetic rate equation analysis and definitive experimental tests, to establish unambiguously the decisive role of London dispersion force in molecular self-assembly of aromatic source molecules. We choose graphene growth on Cu substrates as an important class of prototypical model systems, and the microscopic mechanisms revealed are broadly applicable in other nanofabrication processes via molecular assembly.Because of its exotic electronic properties [11][12][13][14][15]
A macroscopic film (2.5 cm × 2.5 cm) made by layer‐by‐layer assembly of 100 single‐layer polycrystalline graphene films is reported. The graphene layers are transferred and stacked one by one using a wet process that leads to layer defects and interstitial contamination. Heat‐treatment of the sample up to 2800 °C results in the removal of interstitial contaminants and the healing of graphene layer defects. The resulting stacked graphene sample is a freestanding film with near‐perfect in‐plane crystallinity but a mixed stacking order through the thickness, which separates it from all existing carbon materials. Macroscale tensile tests yields maximum values of 62 GPa for the Young's modulus and 0.70 GPa for the fracture strength, significantly higher than has been reported for any other macroscale carbon films; microscale tensile tests yield maximum values of 290 GPa for the Young's modulus and 5.8 GPa for the fracture strength. The measured in‐plane thermal conductivity is exceptionally high, 2292 ± 159 W m−1 K−1 while in‐plane electrical conductivity is 2.2 × 105 S m−1. The high performance of these films is attributed to the combination of the high in‐plane crystalline order and unique stacking configuration through the thickness.
Camphor is used to transfer centimeter-scale ultrathin films onto custom-designed substrates for mechanical (tensile) testing. Compared to traditional transfer methods using dissolving/peeling to remove the support-layers, camphor is sublimed away in air at low temperature, thereby avoiding additional stress on the as-transferred films. Large-area ultrathin films can be transferred onto hollow substrates without damage by this method. Tensile measurements are made on centimeter-scale 300 nm-thick graphene oxide film specimens, much thinner than the ≈2 μm minimum thickness of macroscale graphene-oxide films previously reported. Tensile tests were also done on two different types of large-area samples of adlayer free CVD-grown single-layer graphene supported by a ≈100 nm thick polycarbonate film; graphene stiffens this sample significantly, thus the intrinsic mechanical response of the graphene can be extracted. This is the first tensile measurement of centimeter-scale monolayer graphene films. The Young's modulus of polycrystalline graphene ranges from 637 to 793 GPa, while for near single-crystal graphene, it ranges from 728 to 908 GPa (folds parallel to the tensile loading direction) and from 683 to 775 GPa (folds orthogonal to the tensile loading direction), demonstrating the mechanical performance of large-area graphene in a size scale relevant to many applications.
Graphene plasmons with tightly confined fields and actively tunable resonant frequencies enable the selective detection of molecular vibrational fingerprints with ultrahigh sensitivity, significantly promoting the development of surface‐enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopies (SEIRAS). However, current experimentally obtained enhancements are much smaller than the theoretical prediction due to the extremely low graphene plasmonic mode energy. In this paper, the strategies to improve the mode energy are theoretically and experimentally investigated in a one‐port graphene plasmonic system. By optimizing the Fabry–Pérot cavity length and employing multi‐layer graphene to drive the system into the near critical coupling regime, the localized graphene plasmonic absorptions can be improved from 3% to more than 92%. This induces a 37 times improvement of graphene plasmonic mode energy from 0.4 × 10−13 to 1.5 × 10−12 J per period for the strong plasmon–molecule interactions, enabling the highly sensitive detection of 8 nm thick molecular film. The SEIRAS experimental results demonstrate that a maximum enhancement factor of 162 can be achieved, which is one order larger than that of the reported localized graphene plasmonic sensors. The results showcase the practical usability of localized graphene plasmons for the next‐generation high sensitive nanoscale infrared spectroscopy.
Ag nanoparticles (NPs) modified graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) are proposed to function as the high‐performance shared substrates for surface‐enhanced Raman and infrared absorption spectroscopy (SERS and SEIRAS). This is realized by modulating the localized plasmonic resonances of Ag NPs in visible region and GNRs in mid‐infrared region simultaneously, so as to selectively employ each resonance to acquire SERS and SEIRAS on a single substrate. As a proof of concept, shared substrates are prepared by fabricating GNRs on a Fabry–Pérot like cavity, followed by depositing a thin Ag film with annealing treatment to achieve Ag NPs. Complementary Raman and infrared active vibrational modes of rhodamine 6G molecules can be extracted from the SERS and SEIRAS spectra. By optimizing the dimension of Ag NPs, SERS enhancement factors at the order of 105 can be achieved, which are comparable with or even larger than that of the reported shared substrates. Meanwhile, various polyethylene oxide vibrational modes can be recognized with maximum SEIRAS amplification up to 170 times, which is one order larger than that of the reported graphene plasmonic infrared sensors. Such plasmonic nanosensor with excellent SERS and SEIRAS performance exhibits promising potential for biosensing applications on an integrated lab‐on‐a‐chip strategy.
A folding technique is reported to incorporate large-area monolayer graphene films in polymer composites for mechanical reinforcement. Compared with the classic stacking method, the folding strategy results in further stiffening, strengthening, and toughening of the composite. By using a water-air-interface-facilitated procedure, an A5-size 400 nm thin polycarbonate (PC) film is folded in half 10 times to a ≈0.4 mm thick material (1024 layers). A large PC/graphene film is also folded by the same process, resulting in a composite with graphene distributed uniformly. A three-point bending test is performed to study the mechanical performance of the composites. With a low volume fraction of graphene (0.085%), the Young's modulus, strength, and toughness modulus are enhanced in the folded composite by an average of 73.5%, 73.2%, and 59.1%, respectively, versus the pristine stacked polymer films, or 40.2%, 38.5%, and 37.3% versus the folded polymer film, proving a remarkable mechanical reinforcement from the combined folding and reinforcement of graphene. These results are rationalized with combined theoretical and computational analyses, which also allow the synergistic behavior between the reinforcement and folding to be quantified. The folding approach could be extended/applied to other 2D nanomaterials to design and make macroscale laminated composites with enhanced mechanical properties.
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