4.6 Article

Metal-assisted exfoliation (MAE): green, roll-to-roll compatible method for transferring graphene to flexible substrates

Journal

NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/26/4/045301

Keywords

graphene; transparent electrode; roll-to-roll processing; green nanofabrication; CVD; flexible electronics

Funding

  1. University of California, San Diego
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) [FA9550-13-1-0156]
  3. SoCal Clean Energy Technology Acceleration Program from the von Liebig Center at UCSD
  4. US Department of Energy
  5. National Science Foundation [DGE-1144086]
  6. Calit2-Qualcomm Institute Summer Undergraduate Research Scholars program
  7. Ronald McNair Program

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Graphene is expected to play a significant role in future technologies that span a range from consumer electronics, to devices for the conversion and storage of energy, to conformable biomedical devices for healthcare. To realize these applications, however, a low-cost method of synthesizing large areas of high-quality graphene is required. Currently, the only method to generate large-area single-layer graphene that is compatible with roll-to-roll manufacturing destroys approximately 300 kg of copper foil (thickness = 25 mu m) for every 1 g of graphene produced. This paper describes a new environmentally benign and scalable process of transferring graphene to flexible substrates. The process is based on the preferential adhesion of certain thin metallic films to graphene; separation of the graphene from the catalytic copper foil is followed by lamination to a flexible target substrate in a process that is compatible with roll-to-roll manufacturing. The copper substrate is indefinitely reusable and the method is substantially greener than the current process that uses relatively large amounts of corrosive etchants to remove the copper. The sheet resistance of the graphene produced by this new process is unoptimized but should be comparable in principle to that produced by the standard method, given the defects observable by Raman spectroscopy and the presence of process-induced cracks. With further improvements, this green, inexpensive synthesis of single-layer graphene could enable applications in flexible, stretchable, and disposable electronics, low-profile and lightweight barrier materials, and in large-area displays and photovoltaic modules.

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