PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Graphene: Growing giants

Huge grains of copper promote better graphene growth

2013-12-06
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Jason Socrates Bardi
jbardi@aip.org
240-535-4954
American Institute of Physics
Graphene: Growing giants Huge grains of copper promote better graphene growth

WASHINGTON D.C. Dec. 6, 2013 -- To technology insiders, graphene is a certified big deal. The one-atom thick carbon-based material elicits rhapsodic descriptions as the strongest, thinnest material known. It also is light, flexible, and able to conduct electricity as well as copper. Graphene-based electronics promise advances such as faster internet speeds, cheaper solar cells, novel sensors, space suits spun from graphene yarn, and more.

Now a research team at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colo., may help bring graphene's promise closer to reality. While searching for an ideal growth platform for the material, investigators developed a promising new recipe for a graphene substrate: a thin film of copper with massive crystalline grains. The team's findings appear in the journal AIP Advances, which is produced by AIP Publishing.

The key advance is the grain size of the copper substrate. The large grains are several centimeters in size – lunkers by microelectronics standards – but their relative bulk enables them to survive the high temperatures needed for graphene growth, explained NIST researcher Mark Keller.

The inability of most copper films to survive this stage of graphene growth "has been one problem preventing wafer-scale production of graphene devices," Keller said.

Thin films are an essential component of many electronic, optical, and medical technologies, but the grains in these films are typically smaller than one micrometer. To fabricate the new copper surface, whose grains are about 10,000 times larger, the researchers came up with a two-step process.

First, they deposited copper onto a sapphire wafer held slightly above room temperature. Second, they added the transformative step of annealing, or heat-treating, the film at a much higher temperature, near the melting point of copper. To demonstrate the viability of their giant-grained film, the researchers successfully grew graphene grains 0.2 millimeters in diameter on the new copper surface.



INFORMATION:

The article, "Giant secondary grain growth in Cu films on sapphire" by David L. Miller, Mark W. Keller, Justin M. Shaw, Katherine P. Rice, Robert R. Keller and Kyle M. Diederichsen appears in the journal AIP Advances. See: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4817829

ABOUT THE JOURNAL

AIP Advances is a fully open access, online-only, community-led journal. It covers all areas of applied physical science. With its advanced web 2.0 functionality, the journal puts relevant content and discussion tools in the hands of the community to shape the direction of the physical sciences. See: http://aipadvances.aip.org



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

1 percent of the population is responsible for 63 percent of violent crime convictions

2013-12-06
1 percent of the population is responsible for 63 percent of violent crime convictions The majority of all violent crime in Sweden is committed by a small number of people. They are almost all male (92%) who early in life develops violent criminality, substance abuse ...

Frequent cell phone use linked to anxiety, lower grades and reduced happiness in students

2013-12-06
Frequent cell phone use linked to anxiety, lower grades and reduced happiness in students Today, smartphones are central to college students' lives, keeping them constantly connected with friends, family and the Internet. Students' cell phones are rarely out of reach ...

Taking probiotics in pregnancy or giving them to infants doesn't prevent asthma

2013-12-06
Taking probiotics in pregnancy or giving them to infants doesn't prevent asthma Taking probiotics has health benefits but preventing childhood asthma isn't one of them, shows newly published research led by medical scientists at the ...

Counting the cost of infertility treatment

2013-12-06
Counting the cost of infertility treatment From drug therapy to IVF, out-of pocket costs can range from $900 to $19,000 per treatment cycle, report researchers in The Journal of Urology® New York, NY, December 6, 2013 – Although the demand for infertility treatment ...

Penn researcher traces the history of the American urban squirrel

2013-12-06
Penn researcher traces the history of the American urban squirrel Until recently, Etienne Benson, an assistant professor in the University of Pennsylvania's Department of History and Sociology of Science, has trained his academic eye on the history of ...

At AGU: Shale sequestration, water for energy & soil microbes

2013-12-06
At AGU: Shale sequestration, water for energy & soil microbes PNNL shares research at world's largest geophysical science meeting SAN FRANCISCO – Scientists from the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory will present a variety ...

TSRI scientists: Emerging bird flu strain is still poorly adapted for infecting humans

2013-12-06
TSRI scientists: Emerging bird flu strain is still poorly adapted for infecting humans LA JOLLA, CA—December 5, 2013—Avian influenza virus H7N9, which killed several dozen people in China earlier this year, has not yet acquired the changes needed to infect humans ...

Single microRNA powers motor activity

2013-12-06
Single microRNA powers motor activity Findings have implications for treating severe treatment-refractory epilepsy, says Mount Sinai researcher New research from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai shows that microRNA-128 ...

Slippery fault unleashed destructive Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami

2013-12-06
Slippery fault unleashed destructive Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami First measurement of friction during an earthquake yields surprisingly low value For the first time, scientists have measured the frictional heat produced by the fault slip during ...

Malignant cells adopt a different pathway for genome duplication

2013-12-06
Malignant cells adopt a different pathway for genome duplication Researchers at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, discover how tumour cells solve the problems linked to the replication of their unstable DNA Genomes must be replicated in two copies ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Towards tailor-made heat expansion-free materials for precision technology

New research delves into the potential for AI to improve radiology workflows and healthcare delivery

Rice selected to lead US Space Force Strategic Technology Institute 4

A new clue to how the body detects physical force

Climate projections warn 20% of Colombia’s cocoa-growing areas could be lost by 2050, but adaptation options remain

New poll: American Heart Association most trusted public health source after personal physician

New ethanol-assisted catalyst design dramatically improves low-temperature nitrogen oxide removal

New review highlights overlooked role of soil erosion in the global nitrogen cycle

Biochar type shapes how water moves through phosphorus rich vegetable soils

Why does the body deem some foods safe and others unsafe?

Report examines cancer care access for Native patients

New book examines how COVID-19 crisis entrenched inequality for women around the world

Evolved robots are born to run and refuse to die

Study finds shared genetic roots of MS across diverse ancestries

Endocrine Society elects Wu as 2027-2028 President

Broad pay ranges in job postings linked to fewer female applicants

How to make magnets act like graphene

The hidden cost of ‘bullshit’ corporate speak

Greaux Healthy Day declared in Lake Charles: Pennington Biomedical’s Greaux Healthy Initiative highlights childhood obesity challenge in SWLA

Into the heart of a dynamical neutron star

The weight of stress: Helping parents may protect children from obesity

Cost of physical therapy varies widely from state-to-state

Material previously thought to be quantum is actually new, nonquantum state of matter

Employment of people with disabilities declines in february

Peter WT Pisters, MD, honored with Charles M. Balch, MD, Distinguished Service Award from Society of Surgical Oncology

Rare pancreatic tumor case suggests distinctive calcification patterns in solid pseudopapillary neoplasms

Tubulin prevents toxic protein clumps in the brain, fighting back neurodegeneration

Less trippy, more therapeutic ‘magic mushrooms’

Concrete as a carbon sink

RESPIN launches new online course to bridge the gap between science and global environmental policy

[Press-News.org] Graphene: Growing giants
Huge grains of copper promote better graphene growth