High-Quality AB Bilayer Graphene Films by Direct Solar-Thermal Chemical Vapor Deposition

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Abstract

Mass production of graphene by plasma or thermal chemical vapor deposition consumes much energy, with potentially adverse effects on the environment. This work reports the use of a high-flux solar simulator that approximates the sun’s spectrum and a cold-wall chemical vapor deposition reactor to demonstrate a renewable energy process for graphene growth. Synthesis of high-quality (ID/IG = 0.13) AB-stacked bilayer graphene with greater than 90% coverage is achieved on commercial polycrystalline copper in a one-step process and a short time of 5 min. The graphene exhibits large grain sizes of up to 20 μm with spatial uniformity over a large area up to 20 mm in radius. The transmissivity and sheet resistance of the graphene films fall in the ranges of 92.8-95.3% and 2-4 kΩ/sq, respectively. Thus, direct solar capture provides a compelling option for graphene synthesis that can potentially decrease fabrication costs and environmental pollution.

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Alghfeli, A., & Fisher, T. S. (2023). High-Quality AB Bilayer Graphene Films by Direct Solar-Thermal Chemical Vapor Deposition. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, 11(32), 11719–11728. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.2c07229

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