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Delamination of multilayer graphene stacks from its substrate through wrinkle formation under high pressures

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Abstract There is a need to find new paths for van der Waals 2D-systems detachment and transfer or to control their adhesion state in different environments. We have observed that… Click to show full abstract

Abstract There is a need to find new paths for van der Waals 2D-systems detachment and transfer or to control their adhesion state in different environments. We have observed that supported multilayer graphene immersed in a fluid can be detached from a substrate through pressure application. The process is based on the development of wrinkles originated by the difference of in-plane-compressibility between the graphene stacks and the substrate. Graphene stacks comprised between 9 and 110 layers and immersed in various fluids allowed to investigate the growth and evolution of wrinkles with increasing pressure. The detachment from the substrate stops at the pressure-induced fluid solidification. Methanol, ethanol or their mixtures favor the pressure-induced wrinkle formation in SiO2/Si substrates. In these cases, the pressure evolution of the delamination process follows a universal behavior independently of the number of graphene layers with a complete delamination at ∼4GPa. The quantitative analysis of the wrinkle geometry evolution can be consistently interpreted as due to a pressure-induced increase of the bending stiffness of the graphene stacks, or a reduction of the adhesion forces between the sample and the substrate, or both. These results should also be of practical use in high-pressure experiments of van der Waals systems.

Keywords: wrinkle formation; graphene; stacks substrate; multilayer graphene; graphene stacks; pressure

Journal Title: Carbon
Year Published: 2021

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