Generalized Phase Diagrams for Graphene CVD growth on Copper
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 04:32 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Tensile strain expands the bilayer graphene growth window while chemical desorption suppresses it in high-Gamma regimes.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The authors construct a generalized phase diagram characterized by the coupled effects of alpha, Gamma, and a newly introduced desorption parameter Z. Their results show that tensile strain expands the bilayer graphene growth window for critical nucleus sizes i* greater than 1. In contrast, chemical desorption suppresses bilayer formation in the high-Gamma regime via Z-dependent monomer depletion. This unified framework links macroscopic growth parameters to microscopic layer-selection mechanisms.
What carries the argument
The generalized phase diagram in the space of alpha, Gamma, and Z that incorporates strain-modified barriers and monomer depletion to track the competition between first-layer expansion and second-layer nucleation.
Load-bearing premise
The multi-step CVD process can be accurately mapped into an effective quasi-physical vapor deposition model without losing essential layer-selection physics.
What would settle it
An experiment that applies controlled tensile strain to copper substrates during CVD at fixed temperature and precursor pressure and then measures the resulting bilayer coverage fraction would test whether the bilayer window expands for i* greater than 1.
Figures
read the original abstract
Understanding the competition between first-layer lateral expansion and second-layer nucleation is essential for layer-controlled graphene growth via chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Building on our previous phase diagram framework based on the dimensionless parameters $\alpha$ and $\Gamma$, we develop an enhanced model incorporating two previously neglected effects: thermal-expansion-induced substrate strain and chemical desorption of carbon monomers via reverse dehydrogenation. First-principles calculations are employed to determine the strain-dependent diffusion and attachment barriers on both exposed and graphene-covered Cu(111) surfaces. By mapping the multi-step CVD process into an effective quasi-physical vapor deposition, we construct a generalized phase diagram characterized by the coupled effects of $\alpha$, $\Gamma$, and a newly introduced desorption parameter $Z$. Our results show that tensile strain expands the bilayer graphene (BLG) growth window for critical nucleus sizes $i^*>1$. In contrast, chemical desorption suppresses BLG formation in the high-$\Gamma$ regime via $Z$-dependent monomer depletion. This unified framework provides a predictive guide for the rational synthesis of high-quality bilayer graphene by linking macroscopic growth parameters to microscopic layer-selection mechanisms.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript extends the authors' prior α-Γ phase diagram framework for graphene CVD on Cu by incorporating thermal strain from substrate expansion and chemical desorption of monomers (via reverse dehydrogenation). First-principles DFT calculations provide strain-dependent diffusion and attachment barriers on bare and graphene-covered Cu(111). The multi-step CVD is mapped to an effective quasi-PVD model, introducing a new desorption parameter Z. The resulting generalized phase diagram in the α-Γ-Z space indicates that tensile strain broadens the bilayer graphene (BLG) growth regime for critical nuclei with i* > 1, whereas Z-dependent monomer depletion suppresses BLG formation at high Γ values.
Significance. If the quasi-PVD reduction preserves the essential layer-selection mechanisms, this generalized diagram offers a predictive tool for optimizing CVD parameters to achieve controlled bilayer graphene growth. Strengths include the use of DFT-derived strain effects and the introduction of Z to account for desorption, providing a more complete parameter space than the previous α-Γ model. However, the significance hinges on validation of the effective model against full CVD kinetics.
major comments (2)
- [Model construction] The assumption that the multi-step CVD process can be accurately mapped into an effective quasi-PVD model without losing essential layer-selection physics is central to the claims but lacks explicit verification. Specifically, the manuscript does not compare the effective attachment rates derived from strain-modified barriers to those from a full kinetic model including CH4 dehydrogenation and H2 evolution steps, which could differentially affect exposed vs. graphene-covered surfaces and potentially reverse the reported expansion of the BLG window for i*>1.
- [Phase diagram results] In the discussion of the generalized phase diagram, the claim that tensile strain expands the BLG growth window relies on the strain-dependent barriers from DFT, but no sensitivity analysis or error propagation from the barrier values is provided, making it unclear how robust the expansion is to uncertainties in the first-principles data.
minor comments (2)
- [Notation] The definition and range of the new parameter Z should be clarified with an explicit equation or formula in the main text, as it is introduced as 'newly introduced desorption parameter Z' without immediate mathematical expression.
- [Figures] Figure captions for the phase diagrams could benefit from more detail on the specific values of strain and Z used in the plotted boundaries.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive report. The comments raise important points about model validation and robustness that we address below. We propose targeted revisions to strengthen the presentation while maintaining the core contributions of the generalized phase diagram.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Model construction] The assumption that the multi-step CVD process can be accurately mapped into an effective quasi-PVD model without losing essential layer-selection physics is central to the claims but lacks explicit verification. Specifically, the manuscript does not compare the effective attachment rates derived from strain-modified barriers to those from a full kinetic model including CH4 dehydrogenation and H2 evolution steps, which could differentially affect exposed vs. graphene-covered surfaces and potentially reverse the reported expansion of the BLG window for i*>1.
Authors: We agree that explicit verification against a full kinetic model would be ideal. The quasi-PVD mapping is justified by timescale separation: dehydrogenation and H2 evolution are rapid compared to monomer diffusion and attachment, allowing effective rates to be derived from the DFT barriers on each surface. This approach follows the framework validated in our prior α-Γ work against experimental trends. A complete side-by-side comparison with explicit CH4 dehydrogenation steps on both bare and graphene-covered Cu would require extensive additional kinetic modeling and is beyond the present scope. We will revise the manuscript to expand the discussion of mapping assumptions, cite relevant kinetic literature, and note the potential limitations without claiming the expansion is proven under every possible kinetic detail. revision: partial
-
Referee: [Phase diagram results] In the discussion of the generalized phase diagram, the claim that tensile strain expands the BLG growth window relies on the strain-dependent barriers from DFT, but no sensitivity analysis or error propagation from the barrier values is provided, making it unclear how robust the expansion is to uncertainties in the first-principles data.
Authors: We accept this criticism. The reported expansion of the BLG window under tensile strain is based on the central DFT barrier values, and uncertainties in those values (typically 0.05–0.15 eV for such calculations) could affect quantitative boundaries. In the revised manuscript we will add a sensitivity analysis, varying the diffusion and attachment barriers within estimated DFT error ranges and showing that the qualitative widening of the BLG regime for i*>1 persists. This will be presented either in the main text or as a supplementary figure. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Derivation chain is self-contained with independent DFT inputs and new parameter Z
full rationale
The paper computes strain-dependent barriers using first-principles calculations on exposed and graphene-covered Cu(111), introduces the new desorption parameter Z, and maps the multi-step CVD process to an effective quasi-PVD model to generalize the prior α-Γ framework. The reported effects (tensile strain expanding the i*>1 BLG window and Z suppressing formation at high Γ via monomer depletion) are derived outcomes of this construction rather than tautological redefinitions or fitted quantities that reduce to the inputs by construction. The reference to the authors' previous phase diagram is an extension but does not render the central claims circular, as the new elements rest on external DFT data and the explicit introduction of Z. No load-bearing self-citation, self-definitional steps, or fitted-input predictions are identifiable from the provided text.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- Z
axioms (2)
- domain assumption First-principles calculations correctly yield strain-dependent diffusion and attachment barriers on exposed and graphene-covered Cu(111).
- domain assumption The multi-step CVD chemistry can be reduced to an effective quasi-physical vapor deposition process while preserving layer-selection outcomes.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
By mapping the multi-step CVD process into an effective quasi-physical vapor deposition, we construct a generalized phase diagram characterized by the coupled effects of α, Γ, and a newly introduced desorption parameter Z.
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
the competition between first-layer lateral expansion and second-layer nucleation is governed by the coupled effects of α, Γ, and the newly introduced desorption parameter Z
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
K. S. Novoselov, A. K. Geim, S. V . Morozov, D. Jiang, Y . Zhang, S. V . Dubonos, I. V . Grigorieva, and A. A. Firsov, Electric field effect in atomically thin carbon films, Science 306, 666 (2004)
work page 2004
-
[2]
K. S. Kim, Y . Zhao, H. Jang, S. Y . Lee, J. M. Kim, K. S. Kim, J.- H. Ahn, P. Kim, J.-Y . Choi, and B. H. Hong, Large-scale pattern growth of graphene films for stretchable transparent electrodes, Nature457, 706 (2009)
work page 2009
-
[3]
J. Shen, Y . Zhu, X. Yang, and C. Li, Graphene quantum dots: emergent nanolights for bioimaging, sensors, catalysis and pho- tovoltaic devices, Chem. Commun.48, 3686 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[4]
K. S. Novoselov, Z. Jiang, Y . Zhang, S. V . Morozov, H. L. Stormer, U. Zeitler, J. C. Maan, G. S. Boebinger, P. Kim, and A. K. Geim, Room-temperature quantum hall effect in graphene, Science315, 1379 (2007)
work page 2007
-
[5]
A. A. Balandin, Thermal properties of graphene and nanostruc- tured carbon materials, Nat. Mater.10, 569 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[6]
C. Lee, X. Wei, J. W. Kysar, and J. Hone, Measurement of the elastic properties and intrinsic strength of monolayer graphene, Science321, 385 (2008)
work page 2008
-
[7]
F. Xia, D. B. Farmer, Y .-m. Lin, and P. Avouris, Graphene field- effect transistors with high on/off current ratio and large trans- port band gap at room temperature, Nano Lett.10, 715 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[8]
E. V . Castro, K. S. Novoselov, S. V . Morozov, N. M. R. Peres, J. M. B. L. dos Santos, J. Nilsson, F. Guinea, A. K. Geim, and A. H. C. Neto, Biased bilayer graphene: Semiconductor with a gap tunable by the electric field effect, Phys. Rev. Lett.99, 216802 (2007)
work page 2007
-
[9]
J. O. Island, X. Cui, C. Lewandowski, J. Y . Khoo, E. M. Span- ton, H. Zhou, D. Rhodes, J. C. Hone, T. Taniguchi, K. Watan- abe, L. S. Levitov, M. P. Zaletel, and A. F. Young, Spin–orbit- driven band inversion in bilayer graphene by the van der waals proximity effect, Nature571, 85 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[10]
Y . Cao, V . Fatemi, A. Demir, S. Fang, S. L. Tomarken, J. Y . Luo, J. D. Sanchez-Yamagishi, K. Watanabe, T. Taniguchi, E. Kaxi- ras, R. C. Ashoori, and P. Jarillo-Herrero, Correlated insulator behaviour at half-filling in magic-angle graphene superlattices, Nature556, 80 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[11]
Y . Cao, V . Fatemi, S. Fang, K. Watanabe, T. Taniguchi, E. Kaxi- ras, and P. Jarillo-Herrero, Unconventional superconductivity in magic-angle graphene superlattices, Nature556, 43 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[12]
H. C. Lee, W.-W. Liu, S.-P. Chai, A. R. Mohamed, C. W. Lai, C.-S. Khe, C. V oon, U. Hashim, and N. Hidayah, Synthesis of single-layer graphene: A review of recent development, Proce- dia Chemistry19, 916 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[13]
K. S. Novoselov, V . I. Fal′ko, L. Colombo, P. R. Gellert, M. G. Schwab, and K. Kim, A roadmap for graphene, Nature490, 192 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[14]
W. Yao, H. Liu, J. Sun, B. Wu, and Y . Liu, Engineering of chemical vapor deposition graphene layers: Growth, character- ization, and properties, Adv. Funct. Mater.32, 2202584 (2022)
work page 2022
- [15]
-
[16]
R. Yagi, T. Hirahara, R. Ebisuoka, T. Nakasuga, S. Tajima, K. Watanabe, and T. Taniguchi, Low-energy band structure and even-odd layer number effect in AB-stacked multilayer graphene, Sci. Rep.8, 13018 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[17]
K. Nagashio, T. Nishimura, K. Kita, and A. Toriumi, Mobility variations in mono- and multi-layer graphene films, Appl. Phys. Express2, 025003 (2009)
work page 2009
-
[18]
G. Gajewski and C.-W. Pao, Ab initio calculations of the re- action pathways for methane decomposition over the Cu(111) 10 surface, J. Chem. Phys.135, 064707 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[19]
Y . He, H. Wang, S. Jiang, and Y . Mo, A first-principles study of the effect of surface oxygen during the early stage of graphene growth on a Cu(111) surface, Comput. Mater. Sci168, 17 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[20]
K. Li, C. He, M. Jiao, Y . Wang, and Z. Wu, A first-principles study on the role of hydrogen in early stage of graphene growth during the CH4 dissociation on Cu(111) and Ni(111) surfaces, Carbon74, 255 (2014)
work page 2014
- [21]
-
[22]
X. Wang, Q. Yuan, J. Li, and F. Ding, The transition metal sur- face dependent methane decomposition in graphene chemical vapor deposition growth, Nanoscale9, 11584 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[23]
T. Ma, W. Ren, X. Zhang, Z. Liu, Y . Gao, L. C. Yin, X. L. Ma, F. Ding, and H. M. Cheng, Edge-controlled growth and kinetics of single-crystal graphene domains by chemical vapor deposition, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.110, 20386 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[24]
Z. Qiu, P. Li, Z. Li, and J. Yang, Atomistic simulations of graphene growth: From kinetics to mechanism, Acc. Chem. Res.51, 728 (2018)
work page 2018
- [25]
- [26]
-
[27]
P. Li, Z. Li, and J. Yang, Dominant kinetic pathways of graphene growth in chemical vapor deposition: The role of hy- drogen, J. Phys. Chem. C121, 25949 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[28]
S. Chen, J. Gao, B. M. Srinivasan, G. Zhang, V . Sorkin, R. Har- iharaputran, and Y .-W. Zhang, A kinetic monte carlo model for the growth and etching of graphene during chemical vapor de- position, Carbon146, 399 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[29]
X. Kong, J. Zhuang, L. Zhu, and F. Ding, The complementary graphene growth and etching revealed by large-scale kinetic monte carlo simulation, npj Comput. Mater.7, 14 (2021)
work page 2021
- [30]
-
[31]
W. Chen, P. Cui, W. Zhu, E. Kaxiras, Y . Gao, and Z. Zhang, Atomistic mechanisms for bilayer growth of graphene on metal substrates, Phys. Rev. B91, 045408 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[32]
H. C. Hong, J. I. Ryu, and H. C. Lee, Recent understanding in the chemical vapor deposition of multilayer graphene: Control- ling uniformity, thickness, and stacking configuration, Nano- materials13, 2217 (2023)
work page 2023
-
[33]
R. Xue, I. H. Abidi, and Z. Luo, Domain size, layer number and morphology control for graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition, Funct. Mater. Lett.10, 1730003 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[34]
L. Sun, Z. Wang, Y . Wang, L. Zhao, Y . Li, B. Chen, S. Huang, S. Zhang, W. Wang, D. Pei, H. Fang, S. Zhong, H. Liu, J. Zhang, L. Tong, Y . Chen, Z. Li, M. H. Rummeli, K. S. Novoselov, H. Peng, L. Lin, and Z. Liu, Hetero-site nucleation for growing twisted bilayer graphene with a wide range of twist angles, Nat. Commun.12, 2391 (2021)
work page 2021
-
[35]
Q. Li, H. Chou, J.-H. Zhong, J.-Y . Liu, A. Dolocan, J. Zhang, Y . Zhou, R. S. Ruoff, S. Chen, and W. Cai, Growth of adlayer graphene on Cu studied by carbon isotope labeling, Nano Lett. 13, 486 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[36]
S. Nie, W. Wu, S. Xing, Q. Yu, J. Bao, S.-s. Pei, and K. F. McCarty, Growth from below: bilayer graphene on copper by chemical vapor deposition, New J. Phys.14, 093028 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[37]
T. Wang, J. Zheng, X. Wei, and D. Shu, Phase diagram of growth modes in graphene growth on copper by vapor depo- sition, Phys. Rev. Mater.9, L021001 (2025)
work page 2025
-
[38]
K. Wang and R. Reeber, Thermal expansion of copper, High Temp. Mater. Sci.35, 181 (1996)
work page 1996
- [39]
-
[40]
A. Marashdeh, S. Casolo, L. Sementa, H. Zacharias, and G.-J. Kroes, Surface temperature effects on dissociative chemisorp- tion of H2 on Cu(100), J. Phys. Chem. C117, 8851 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[41]
Y . Dong, S. Guo, H. Mao, C. Xu, Y . Xie, C. Cheng, X. Mao, J. Deng, G. Pan, and J. Sun, The growth of graphene on Ni–Cu alloy thin films at a low temperature and its carbon diffusion mechanism, Nanomaterials9, 1633 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[42]
I. Vlassiouk, M. Regmi, P. Fulvio, S. Dai, P. Datskos, G. Eres, and S. Smirnov, Role of hydrogen in chemical vapor deposi- tion growth of large single-crystal graphene, ACS Nano5, 6069 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[43]
X. Sun, S. Lou, W. Wang, X. Liu, X. Sun, Y . Song, W. Yang, and Z. Liu, Kinetics of hydrogen constrained graphene growth on Cu substrate, Nano Res.17, 9284 (2024)
work page 2024
-
[44]
P. Leidinger, T. Kratky, and S. Günther, Extending the predic- tive growth kinetics for the CVD synthesis of graphene on cop- per to the low-pressure regime, J. Phys. Chem. C127, 8136 (2023)
work page 2023
-
[45]
P. Zhao, Y . Cheng, D. Zhao, K. Yin, X. Zhang, M. Song, S. Yin, Y . Song, P. Wang, M. Wang, Y . Xia, and H. Wang, The role of hydrogen in oxygen-assisted chemical vapor deposition growth of millimeter-sized graphene single crystals, Nanoscale8, 7646 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[46]
I. Mitchell and A. Page, The influence of hydrogen on transition metal - Catalysed graphene nucleation, Carbon128, 215 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[47]
X. Dai, I. Mitchell, S. Kim, H. An, and F. Ding, Multilayer graphene sunk growth on Cu(111) surface, Carbon199, 233 (2022)
work page 2022
-
[48]
Z. Xu, G. Zhao, L. Qiu, X. Zhang, G. Qiao, and F. Ding, Molec- ular dynamics simulation of graphene sinking during chemi- cal vapor deposition growth on semi-molten Cu substrate, npj Comput. Mater.6, 14 (2020)
work page 2020
-
[49]
B. Chen, X. Zeng, Z. Liu, W. Dong, D. Pei, H. Wang, Y . Dong, C. Wu, X. Gao, H. Xiao, H. Gao, H. Jia, A. Yuan, J. Du, H. Chen, H. Liu, C. Tan, J. Yin, Z. Liu, L. Liu, P. Gao, K. S. Novoselov, H. Peng, Z. Li, L. Sun, and Z. Liu, Edge- feeding synchronous epitaxy of layer-controlled graphene films on heterogeneous catalytic substrates, Nat. Commun.16, 5490 (2025)
work page 2025
-
[50]
P. Leidinger and S. Günther, Insight into the thermodynamics of graphene growth on copper, J. Phys. Chem. C125, 12663 (2021)
work page 2021
-
[51]
B. Huet and J.-P. Raskin, Pressure-controlled chemical vapor deposition of single-layer graphene with millimeter-size do- mains on thin copper film, Chem. Mater.29, 3431 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[52]
S. Lee, K. Lee, and Z. Zhong, Wafer scale homogeneous bilayer graphene films by chemical vapor deposition, Nano Lett.10, 4702 (2010)
work page 2010
- [53]
-
[54]
Walton, Nucleation of vapor deposits, J
D. Walton, Nucleation of vapor deposits, J. Chem. Phys.37, 2182 (1962). 11
work page 1962
-
[55]
J. A. Venables, Rate equation approaches to thin film nucleation kinetics, Philos. Mag.27, 697 (1973)
work page 1973
-
[56]
J. A. Venables, G. D. T. Spiller, and M. Hanbucken, Nucleation and growth of thin films, Rep. Prog. Phys.47, 399 (1984)
work page 1984
-
[57]
J. Tang, Y . Wang, Y . Ma, X. Gao, X. Gao, N. Li, Y . Wang, S. Zhang, L. Zheng, B. Deng, R. Yan, Y . Cao, R. Zhang, L. Tong, J. Zhang, P. Gao, Z. Liu, X. Wei, H. Liu, and H. Peng, Ultrafast growth of wafer-scale fold-free bilayer graphene, Nano Res.16, 10684 (2023)
work page 2023
- [58]
-
[59]
M. Fabiane, M. J. Madito, A. Bello, and N. Manyala, Raman spectroscopy and imaging of bernal-stacked bilayer graphene synthesized on copper foil by chemical vapour deposition: growth dependence on temperature, J. Raman Spectrosc.48, 639 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[60]
R. S. Weatherup, B. Dlubak, and S. Hofmann, Kinetic control of catalytic CVD for high-quality graphene at low temperatures, ACS Nano6, 9996 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[61]
H. Mehdipour and K. K. Ostrikov, Kinetics of low-pressure, low-temperature graphene growth: Toward single-layer, single- crystalline structure, ACS Nano6, 10276 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[62]
J. Li, M. Chen, A. Samad, H. Dong, A. Ray, J. Zhang, X. Jiang, U. Schwingenschlögl, J. Domke, C. Chen, Y . Han, T. Fritz, R. S. Ruoff, B. Tian, and X. Zhang, Wafer-scale single-crystal mono- layer graphene grown on sapphire substrate, Nat. Mater.21, 740 (2022)
work page 2022
-
[63]
X. Zhang, T. Wu, Q. Jiang, H. Wang, H. Zhu, Z. Chen, R. Jiang, T. Niu, Z. Li, Y . Zhang, Z. Qiu, G. Yu, A. Li, S. Qiao, H. Wang, Q. Yu, and X. Xie, Epitaxial growth of 6 in. single-crystalline graphene on a Cu/Ni (111) film at 750 ◦C via chemical vapor deposition, Small15, e1805395 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[64]
B. Deng, Z. Pang, S. Chen, X. Li, C. Meng, J. Li, M. Liu, J. Wu, Y . Qi, W. Dang, H. Yang, Y . Zhang, J. Zhang, N. Kang, H. Xu, Q. Fu, X. Qiu, P. Gao, Y . Wei, Z. Liu, and H. Peng, Wrinkle- free single-crystal graphene wafer grown on strain-engineered substrates, ACS Nano11, 12337 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[65]
Y . Takesaki, K. Kawahara, H. Hibino, S. Okada, M. Tsuji, and H. Ago, Highly uniform bilayer graphene on epitaxial Cu–Ni(111) alloy, Chem. Mater.28, 4583 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[66]
J. Zhang, X. Liu, M. Zhang, R. Zhang, H. Q. Ta, J. Sun, W. Wang, W. Zhu, T. Fang, K. Jia, X. Sun, X. Zhang, Y . Zhu, J. Shao, Y . Liu, X. Gao, Q. Yang, L. Sun, Q. Li, F. Liang, H. Chen, L. Zheng, F. Wang, W. Yin, X. Wei, J. Yin, T. Gem- ming, M. H. Rummeli, H. Liu, H. Peng, L. Lin, and Z. Liu, Fast synthesis of large-area bilayer graphene film on Cu, Nat....
work page 2023
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.