| Literature DB >> 31286615 |
Jincan Zhang1,2, Kaicheng Jia1, Li Lin1, Wei Zhao3, Huy Ta Quang4, Luzhao Sun1,2, Tianran Li1, Zhenzhu Li5, Xiaoting Liu1,2, Liming Zheng1, Ruiwen Xue6, Jing Gao5, Zhengtang Luo6, Mark H Rummeli4,5,7, Qinghong Yuan3, Hailin Peng1,8, Zhongfan Liu1,8.
Abstract
Contamination commonly observed on the graphene surface is detrimental to its excellent properties and strongly hinders its application. It is still a great challenge to produce large-area clean graphene film in a low-cost manner. Herein, we demonstrate a facile and scalable chemical vapor deposition approach to synthesize meter-sized samples of superclean graphene with an average cleanness of 99 %, relying on the weak oxidizing ability of CO2 to etch away the intrinsic contamination, i.e., amorphous carbon. Remarkably, the elimination of amorphous carbon enables a significant reduction of polymer residues in the transfer of graphene films and the fabrication of graphene-based devices and promises strongly enhanced electrical and optical properties of graphene. The facile synthesis of large-area superclean graphene would open the pathway for both fundamental research and industrial applications of graphene, where a clean surface is highly needed.Entities:
Keywords: carbon dioxide; chemical vapor deposition; graphene; selective etching
Year: 2019 PMID: 31286615 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201905672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336