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American Institute of Physics, Applied Physics Letters, 2(100), p. 022102

DOI: 10.1063/1.3675632

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Noncatalytic chemical vapor deposition of graphene on high-temperature substrates for transparent electrodes

Journal article published in 2012 by Jie Sun, Matthew T. Cole, Niclas Lindvall, Kenneth B. K. Teo, Avgust Yurgens ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A noncatalytic chemical vapor deposition mechanism is proposed, where high precursor concentration, long deposition time, high temperature, and flat substrate are needed to grow large-area nanocrystalline graphene using hydrocarbon pyrolysis. The graphene is scalable, uniform, and with controlled thickness. It can be deposited on virtually any nonmetallic substrate that withstands similar to 1000 degrees C. For typical examples, graphene grown directly on quartz and sapphire shows transmittance and conductivity similar to exfoliated or metal-catalyzed graphene, as evidenced by transmission spectroscopy and transport measurements. Raman spectroscopy confirms the sp(2)-C structure. The model and results demonstrate a promising transfer-free technique for transparent electrode production.