Aachen/Germany, March 19, 2012 - Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin, USA, have demonstrated high quality wafer-scale deposition of graphene on evaporated copper films for the first time, using their recently acquired cold-wall vertical BM (Black Magic) Pro reactor from AIXTRON. The findings have been reported in a publication on the American Chemical Society's Nano website1.

"Most research and synthesis of graphene to date has been on copper foil, and while good quality films can be achieved using such a method, we have succeeded in depositing monolayer graphene chemical with negligible defects onto evaporated copper films on the wafer-scale. A pre-annealing process is used at first to create a hydrogen-rich polycrystalline copper film of <111> preferential orientation, followed by the decomposition of pure methane for the growth of high quality graphene. The growth proceeds without the need for hydrogen gas during the growth phase, and occurs at a lower processing temperature than on copper foil," describes Prof. Deji Akinwande2 who led this research together with Prof. Rod Ruoff's team at the Microelectronics Research Center at UT Austin.

"This work creates a pathway for wafer-scale synthesis of graphene with negligible defects which is an essential requirement for heterogeneous graphene/Si VLSI applications and industrial adoption of graphene. Indeed, the BM Pro is a high-performance, flexible platform with unique chemical vapor deposition processing capabilities. This allowed us to conduct our research effectively and achieve these growth results in a short time with outstanding uniformity on the wafer-scale," says Prof. Akinwande.

The experimental work was carried out at the National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network (NNIN) and Texas Materials Institute (TMI) facilities at The University of Texas at Austin and is supported in part by the Nanoelectronic Research Initiative (NRI-SWAN Center), and the Office of Naval Research. Established in 1983, the Microelectronics Research Center is equipped with state-of-the-art semiconductor fabrication equipment housed in 12,000 square feet of Class 100 and Class 1000 cleanroom space, with 15,000 square feet of characterization laboratories. The Center has 15 faculty and 120 graduate students, and is recognized as one of the leading centers of excellence for graphene research.

Shown standing beside the AIXTRON BM Pro PECVD reactor: members of Prof. Akinwande's group. In the picture (L to R): Li Tao (postdoc scholar), Nassibe Rahimi, Kristen Parrish, Maryam Mortazavi and Fahad Chowdhury (all PhD students of the group).

1 Li Tao, Jongho Lee, Harry Chou, Milo Holt, Rodney S. Ruoff, and Prof. Deji Akinwande, "Synthesis of High Quality Monolayer Graphene at Reduced Temperature on Hydrogen-Enriched Evaporated Copper (111) Films", ACS Nano (2012), DOI: 10.1021/nn205068n

2 Prof. Deji Akinwande can be contacted by phone at +1 703 623 6423 or at The University of Texas, Austin, 10100 Burnet Road, Austin, TX 78758

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This press release was issued by Aixtron SE and was distributed, unedited and unaltered, by noodls on 2012-03-19 10:56:13 AM. The issuer is solely responsible for the accuracy of the information contained therein.