4.6 Article

Effect of Ni atomic fraction on active species of graphene growth on Cu-Ni alloy catalysts: a density functional theory study

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 708-723

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cp04621k

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The Ni atomic fraction in Cu-Ni alloy catalysts greatly affects the stability and activity of carbon source species, leading to different growth mechanisms of graphene. CH and C monomers play a dominant role in surface-mediated growth on Cu-Ni catalysts with low Ni atomic fractions, while the C monomer on the subsurface controls the cooling-induced segregation growth mechanism in Cu-Ni catalysts with high Ni atomic fractions.
Cu-Ni alloys are promising catalysts for precisely controlling the number of graphene layers grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). However, the theoretical understanding of the effect of the Ni atomic fraction on the active species, which helps determine the mechanism of graphene growth, is still limited. Here, we examine the energetics, electronic properties, and populations of potential carbon source species (CH3, CH2, CH, C) on Cu-Ni alloy catalysts with various Ni atomic fractions under various CVD growth conditions using density functional theory combined with atomistic thermodynamics. An increased Ni atomic fraction of the Cu-Ni alloy catalyst increases the d-band center and d-orbital delocalization of the Ni atoms. Therefore, the stability of the carbon source adsorbed on the surface and subsurface of the catalyst increases. Relative population analysis shows that the CH and C monomers on the surface are the active species that drive surface-mediated growth on Cu-Ni catalysts with low Ni atomic fractions. The dominance of CH and C species can be further tuned by adjusting the growth temperature and partial pressure of H-2. In contrast, in a Cu-Ni catalyst with a high Ni atomic fraction, the C monomer species on the subsurface has high stability and acts as an active species that controls the cooling-induced segregation growth mechanism. This study provides an essential insight into the atomistic mechanism of graphene growth in Cu-Ni alloy catalysts.

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