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The graphene islands, formed as different sizes, are crucial for the final quality of the formed graphene during the CVD growth either as the nucleation seeds or as the build blocks for larger graphene domains. Extensive efforts had been devoted to the size or the morphology control while fewer works were reported on the moving dynamics of these graphene islands as well as the associate influences to their coalescence during the CVD Growth of graphene. In this study, based on the self-developed C-Cu empirical potential, we performed systematic molecular dynamics simulations on the surface moving of three typical graphene islands CN (N = 24, 54 and 96) on the Cu (111) surface and discovered their different behaviors in sinking, lateral translation and rotation at the atomic scale owning to their different sizes, which were proved to bring forth significant impacts to their coalescences and the final quality of the as-formed larger domains of graphene. This study would deepen our atomistic insights into the mechanisms of the graphene CVD growth and provide significant theoretical guidelines to its controlled synthesis.
We present a study of graphene/substrate interactions on UHV-grown graphene islands with minimal surface contamination using emph{in situ} low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). We compare the physical and electronic structure of the sa
We present a scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) study of native defects in graphene islands grown by ultra-high vacuum (UHV) decomposition of ethylene on Cu(111). We characterize these defects through a survey of their apparent heights, atomic-resol
This paper has been withdrawn by first author KM Seemann.
Titanium-island formation on graphene as a function of defect density is investigated. When depositing titanium on pristine graphene, titanium atoms cluster and form islands with an average diameter of about 10nm and an average height of a few atomic
Synthetic diamond production is key to the development of quantum metrology and quantum information applications of diamond. The major quantum sensor and qubit candidate in diamond is the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center. This lattice defect comes