| Literature DB >> 28959046 |
Jun-Ichi Fujita1,2, Takaki Hiyama3,4, Ayaka Hirukawa3,4, Takahiro Kondo5,4, Junji Nakamura5,4, Shin-Ichi Ito5, Ryosuke Araki3,4, Yoshikazu Ito3, Masaki Takeguchi6, Woei Wu Pai7,8.
Abstract
Direct growth of graphene integrated into electronic devices is highly desirable but difficult due to the nominal ~1000 °C chemical vapor deposition (CVD) temperature, which can seriously deteriorate the substrates. Here we report a great reduction of graphene CVD temperature, down to 50 °C on sapphire and 100 °C on polycarbonate, by using dilute methane as the source and molten gallium (Ga) as catalysts. The very low temperature graphene synthesis is made possible by carbon attachment to the island edges of pre-existing graphene nuclei islands, and causes no damages to the substrates. A key benefit of using molten Ga catalyst is the enhanced methane absorption in Ga at lower temperatures; this leads to a surprisingly low apparent reaction barrier of ~0.16 eV below 300 °C. The faster growth kinetics due to a low reaction barrier and a demonstrated low-temperature graphene nuclei transfer protocol can facilitate practical direct graphene synthesis on many kinds of substrates down to 50-100 °C. Our results represent a significant progress in reducing graphene synthesis temperature and understanding its mechanism.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28959046 PMCID: PMC5620074 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-12380-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic illustration of two experimental s (A,B) for the low-temperature graphene edge growth using a molten liquid metal such as Ga and InGa. The first step is the formation of graphene nuclei using 13C-methane at 1050 °C for 300 sec. Lower-room temperature edge growth proceeded subsequently with 12CH4. See main text for details of both protocols. (b) Mechanism of graphene nuclei generation and film growth. (c) Optical images of full coverage graphene films on sapphire and polycarbonate substrates.
Figure 2Raman spectroscopy of low temperature grown graphene. (a) SEM micrographs of graphene grown at 100 °C with different coverage; 0% (13C nuclei only), 60% (partly covered) and 100% (full coverage). (b,c) Raman G-band mapping of 13C- and 12C-graphene respectively at the coverages shown in (a). (d) Raman spectra of 13C graphene nuclei and 12C graphene films grown at 50, 100, and 200 °C. (e) Raman mapping of the I G/I D and I 2D/I G intensity ratios on the 50 °C-grown sample.
Figure 3Atomic structures of low temperature grown graphene. (a) HR-TEM image of graphene film and its corresponding diffraction patterns. (b) HR-TEM image near the graphene grain boundary. The misoriented angle between graphene domains is within 10 degrees, and is seen as two adjacent diffraction patterns.
Figure 4Graphene field-effect transistor performance. (a) Conductance curve of a FET made from graphene synthesized at 100 °C. A top-gated configuration with ionic liquid was used. (b) Dependence of FET electron mobility on the low growth temperature of graphene samples using Ga (red points) with references of graphene/Cu foils (blue rectangles, triangles, and diamonds) and graphene/Fe foil (green triangles)[15–21]. The orange circle presents the electron mobility range of graphene FET made from standard CVD graphene on Cu substrates.
Figure 5Catalytic properties of Ga for methane decomposition. (a) Arrhenius plot of the graphene growth speed at different conditions. The route 1 at high temperatures represents graphene growth via the methane decomposition on the Ga surface. The routes 2 and C at lower temperatures represent the graphene growth via the methane absorption into Ga followed by decomposition in Ga (route 2), and by residual carbon from decomposed methane in Ga (route 3). (b) An illustration of the respective growth mechanisms for routes 1, 2, and 3. (c) Time-dependent hydrogen production amount for methane decomposition in Ga at reaction temperatures of 50, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, and 400 °C. The apparent barrier of hydrogen evolution is derived from the initial production rates. (d) Arrhenius plot of hydrogen production efficiency, for both Ga and InGa catalysts.