4.6 Article

Realizing controllable graphene nucleation by regulating the competition of hydrogen and oxygen during chemical vapor deposition heating

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 18, Issue 34, Pages 23638-23642

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6cp03102a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science and Technology Major Project [2011ZX02707]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61136005, 51402342]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program (B) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB04040300]

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Oxygen can passivate Cu surface active sites when graphene nucleates. Thus, the nucleation density is decreased. The CuO/Cu substrate was chosen for graphene domain synthesis in our study. The results indicate that the CuO/Cu substrate is beneficial for large-scale, single-crystal graphene domain synthesis. Graphene grown on the CuO/Cu substrate exhibits fewer nucleation sites than on Cu foils, suggesting that graphene follows an oxygen-dominating growth. Hydrogen treatment via a heating process could weaken the surface oxygen's role in limiting graphene nucleation under the competition of hydrogen and oxygen and could transfer the synthesis of graphene into a hydrogen-dominating growth. However, the competition only exists during the chemical vapor deposition heating process. For non-hydrogen heated samples, oxygen-dominating growth is experienced even though the samples are annealed in hydrogen for a long time after the heating process. With the temperature increases, the role of hydrogen gradually decreases. The balance of hydrogen and oxygen is adjusted by introducing hydrogen gas at a different heating temperatures. The oxygen concentration on the substrate surface is believed to determine the reactions mechanisms based on the secondary ion mass spectrometry test results. This study provides a new method for the controllable synthesis of graphene nucleation during a heating process.

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