Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is regarded as a promising fabrication method for the automated, large-scale, production of graphene and other two-dimensional materials. However, its full commercial exploitation is limited by the presence of structural imperfections such as folds, wrinkles, and even cracks that downgrade its physical and mechanical properties. For example, as shown here by means of Raman spectroscopy, the stress transfer from an epoxy matrix to CVD graphene is on average 30% of that of exfoliated monolayer graphene of over 10 ?m in dimensions. However, in terms of electrical response, the situation is reversed; the resistance has been found here to decrease by the imposition of mechanical deformation possibly due to the opening up of the structure and the associated increase of electron mobility. This finding paves the way for employing CVD graphene/epoxy composites or coatings as conductive "networks" or bridges in cases for which the conductivity needs to be increased or at least retained when the system is under deformation. The tuning/control of such systems and their operative limitations are discussed here.

Strain Engineering in Highly Wrinkled CVD Graphene/Epoxy Systems

Mirotta Nicola;Scidà Alessandra;Palermo Vincenzo;Palermo Vincenzo;
2018

Abstract

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is regarded as a promising fabrication method for the automated, large-scale, production of graphene and other two-dimensional materials. However, its full commercial exploitation is limited by the presence of structural imperfections such as folds, wrinkles, and even cracks that downgrade its physical and mechanical properties. For example, as shown here by means of Raman spectroscopy, the stress transfer from an epoxy matrix to CVD graphene is on average 30% of that of exfoliated monolayer graphene of over 10 ?m in dimensions. However, in terms of electrical response, the situation is reversed; the resistance has been found here to decrease by the imposition of mechanical deformation possibly due to the opening up of the structure and the associated increase of electron mobility. This finding paves the way for employing CVD graphene/epoxy composites or coatings as conductive "networks" or bridges in cases for which the conductivity needs to be increased or at least retained when the system is under deformation. The tuning/control of such systems and their operative limitations are discussed here.
2018
Istituto per la Sintesi Organica e la Fotoreattivita' - ISOF
Inglese
10
49
43192
43202
11
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.8b14698
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
CVD graphene
electrical resistance
epoxy resin
Raman spectroscopy
wrinkles
The research leading to these results has received funding from research project "Graphene Core 1, GA: 696656 graphenebased disruptive technologies", as well by "Graphene Core 2, GA: 785219", which are implemented under the EU-Horizon 2020 Research & Innovation Actions (RIA), and is financially supported by EC-financed parts of the Graphene Flagship. The Patras group also acknowledges the support of the ERC Advanced Grant "Tailor Graphene" (no: 321124).
14
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Anagnostopoulos, George; Paterakis, George; Polyzos, Ioannis; Pappas Panagiotis, Nektarios; Kouroupisagalou, Kostantinos; Mirotta, Nicola; Scidà, Ales...espandi
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
   Graphene-based disruptive technologies
   GrapheneCore1
   H2020
   696656

   Graphene Flagship Core Project 2
   GrapheneCore2
   H2020
   785219
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/351294
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