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Graphene formed on SiC under various environments: Comparison of Si-face and C-face

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journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Nishtha Srivastava, Guowei He, Luxmi, Patrick C. Mende, Randall FeenstraRandall Feenstra, Yugang Sun

The morphology of graphene on SiC {0001} surfaces formed in various environments including ultra-high vacuum, 1 atm of argon, and 10-6 to 10-4 Torr of disilane is studied by atomic force microscopy, low-energy electron microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. The graphene is formed by heating the surface to 1100 – 1600°C, which causes preferential sublimation of the Si atoms. The argon atmosphere or the background of disilane decreases the sublimation rate so that a higher graphitization temperature is required, thus improving the morphology of the films. For the (0001) surface, large areas of monolayer-thick graphene are formed in this way, with the size of these areas depending on the miscut of the sample. Results on the ( 000 1 ) surface are more complex. This surface graphitizes at a lower temperature than for the (0001) surface and consequently the growth is more three-dimensional. In an atmosphere of argon the morphology becomes even worse, with the surface displaying markedly inhomogeneous nucleation, an effect attributed to unintentional oxidation of the surface during graphitization. Use of a disilane environment for the ( 0001 ) surface is found to produce improved morphology, with relatively large areas of monolayer-thick graphene.

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2012-01-01

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