4.8 Article

Polybenzimidazole copolymer derived lacey carbon film for graphene transfer and contamination removal strategies for imaging graphene nanopores

Journal

CARBON
Volume 173, Issue -, Pages 980-988

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2020.11.068

Keywords

Nanoporous single-layer graphene; AC-HRTEM; HRTEM; Contamination; Nanopores; Graphene transfer

Funding

  1. EPFL
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [PYAPP2_173645]
  3. Swiss Competence Center for Energy Research: Efficiency of Industrial Processes (SCCER-EIP)
  4. joint EPFL-Taiwan scholarship
  5. GAZNAT
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PYAPP2_173645] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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A novel strategy is proposed to fabricate a polymer film with transparent windows to address the issue of residues when observing nanoporous graphene using TEM. The polymer film is transformed into a carbon film with transparent windows, enabling residue-free transfer to the TEM grid without direct contact with the nanopores.
The study of the nanometer-scale vacancy defects (nanopores) in graphene by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is severely hindered by the presence of polymeric residues originating from the graphene-transfer-step to the TEM grid. The state-of-the-art transfer strategies yield contamination-free pristine graphene specimens but do not work well for the nanoporous graphene. This is because of the relatively high energy of the vacant nanopores which makes it difficult to remove the residues without altering the structure of nanoporous graphene. Herein, we present a novel strategy to fabricate a sub-100-nm-thick lacey polymer film hosting see-through windows (10-900 nm) by using a facile nonsolvent-induced phase separation (NIPS). The polymer film is transformed into a lacey carbon film that reinforces graphene and allows residue-free transfer to the TEM grid as one avoids the direct contact between the polymer and the nanopores within a window. Finally, atmospheric-, graphene-synthesis-, and transfer-bath-related contaminants are removed by annealing the specimen inside an activated carbon bed at 900 degrees C in a reducing atmosphere. The method results in samples with large contamination-free areas which are easy to find during aberration-corrected high-resolution TEM (AC-HRTEM) imaging, enabling high throughput structural analysis of graphene nanopores. (C) 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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