Issue 3, 2018, Issue in Progress

Decreasing graphene synthesis temperature by catalytic metal engineering and thermal processing

Abstract

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) from gaseous hydrocarbon sources has shown great promise for large-scale graphene growth, but the high growth temperature, typically 1050 °C, requires precise and expensive equipment and makes the direct deposition of graphene in electronic device manufacturing processes unfeasible due to the severe physical damage to substrates. Here we demonstrate a facile route to synthesize graphene by catalytic metal engineering and thermal processing. The engineered catalytic metal (copper) with carbon implantation could lower the synthetic temperature to 700 °C. And the resulting graphene shows few defects, uniform morphology and high carrier mobility, comparable to CVD graphene grown at 1050 °C. This technique could expand the applications of graphene in electronic and optoelectronic device manufacturing and is compatible with conventional microelectronics technology.

Graphical abstract: Decreasing graphene synthesis temperature by catalytic metal engineering and thermal processing

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Oct 2017
Accepted
24 Nov 2017
First published
04 Jan 2018
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2018,8, 1477-1480

Decreasing graphene synthesis temperature by catalytic metal engineering and thermal processing

L. Zheng, X. Cheng, P. Ye, L. Shen, Q. Wang, D. Zhang, Z. Gu, W. Zhou, D. Wu and Y. Yu, RSC Adv., 2018, 8, 1477 DOI: 10.1039/C7RA11654C

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