GRAPHENE ELECTROCHEMICAL TRANSFER METHOD ASSISTED BY MULTIPLE SUPPORTING FILMS

20200235212 ยท 2020-07-23

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    Disclosed is a graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films, comprising: (1) growing graphene on a substrate, and then spin-coating a thin layer of photoresist on a surface of the graphene as a first film; (2) spin-coating n layers of thick, tough, and selectively dissolvable polymer films on the surface of the first film as an top film; (3) dissociating the multi-layer composite film and the graphene from the surface of the substrate by an electrochemical process, and dissolving the thick polymer films which is the top film with a first solvent; (4) after cleaning, transferring the thin first film and the graphene to a target substrate, and finally dissolving the thin first film away with a second solvent to complete the transfer process. This transfer process is fast, stable, and capable of transferring a large-size graphene, which may promote the large-scale application of graphene.

    Claims

    1. A graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films, comprising: (1) growing graphene on a substrate, and then spin-coating a thin layer of photoresist on a surface of the graphene as a first film; (2) spin-coating n layers of thick, tough and selectively dissolvable polymer films on a surface of the first film as an top film, where 1custom-characterncustom-character10; (3) dissociating a multi-layer composite film and the graphene from the surface of the substrate by an electrochemical process, and dissolving the thick polymer films which are the top film with a first solvent; and (4) after washing, transferring a thin first film and the graphene to the target substrate, and finally dissolving the thin first film away with the use of a second solvent to complete the transfer process.

    2. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the metal substrate is Cu, Ni, Co, Ir, Ru, Pd, Pt, or an alloy thereof, and Cu is preferred.

    3. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the first thin layer of photoresist includes polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), Polybisphenol A, carbonate(PC), or a double-layer film of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and PMMA, and a PMMA film is preferred.

    4. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 3, wherein a thickness of the first thin layer of photoresist is 100 nm-1000 nm, and preferably 200 nm.

    5. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the top film includes polystyrene (PS) or dimethylsiloxane (PDMS), and Styrene (PS) is preferred.

    6. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 5, wherein a thickness of the top film is 1-100 um, and preferably 1 um.

    7. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the electrolyte used in the electrochemical process for electrochemical stripping includes the aqueous solutions of Na.sub.2SO.sub.4, NaCl, NaOH, K.sub.2SO.sub.4, KCl or KOH; with electrolysis voltage of 2-20 V, wherein the electrolyte is preferably a Na.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous solution, and the electrolysis voltage is preferably 3-4V.

    8. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the target substrate includes Si/SiO.sub.2, polymer or BN substrate, and Si/SiO.sub.2 is preferred.

    9. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the first solvent is a solvent capable of dissolving the top film without dissolving the first film, and the first solvent is preferably cyclohexene.

    10. The graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films of claim 1, wherein the second solvent is a solvent capable of dissolving the first film; and the second solvent is preferably acetone.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0036] FIG. 1 illustrates a flowchart of a graphene electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films according to the present disclosure.

    [0037] FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic diagram of an electrolytic peeling process according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0038] FIG. 3 illustrates a schematic diagram of a dissolution process of an upper supporting film according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0039] FIG. 4 illustrates a photo of dissolution process of an upper supporting film according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0040] FIG. 5 illustrates an optical microscope photograph of graphene obtained by using a conventional electrochemical transfer technique.

    [0041] FIG. 6 illustrates an optical microscope photograph of graphene obtained by using the electrochemical transfer process assisted by multiple supporting films according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0042] Hereinafter the present disclosure will be described in more detail in combination with the detailed description and embodiments, thereby the advantages and various effects of the present disclosure will be more clearly presented. Those skilled in the art should understand that these detailed description and examples are intended to illustrate the present disclosure, and not as restrictive.

    [0043] Throughout the specification, unless specifically stated otherwise, the terms as used herein should be construed as the meaning in any way as commonly used in the art. Therefore, unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein generally have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention disclosure belongs.

    [0044] In case of contradict, this specification takes precedence.

    [0045] FIG. 1 illustrates a flowchart of an electrochemical transfer method assisted by multiple supporting films according to the present disclosure. Firstly, the graphene was grown on a substrate; and then a thin layer of photoresist was spin-coated on a surface of the graphene as a protective film (a first film) for the transfer of the graphene; followed by n layers of thick, tough and selectively dissolvable polymer films were spin-coated on a surface of the first film as an top film, where 1custom-characterncustom-character10; then the multi-layer composite film and the graphene were dissociated from the substrate surface by an electrochemical method; and the top thick polymer film was dissolved away with the first solvent; after being washed, the thin first film and the graphene were transferred to the target substrate; finally the first thin protective film was dissociated away with the second solvent, thus the transfer process was completed.

    [0046] The specific steps were as follows:

    [0047] S1: growing a single layer or multiple layers of graphene on a surface of a Cu substrate by a chemical vapor deposition process, and spin-coating thereon a thin PMMA film with a thickness of about 200 nm.

    [0048] S2: spin-coating a thick, tough and selectively soluble PS film as an top film on the surface of the PMMA film;

    [0049] wherein, the preparation process of the top PS film were as follows: dissolving PS polymer particles in 1-methyl-1-cyclohexene, with a mass-volume ratio of 5%, a spin-coating speed of the homogenizer being 2000 rpm/min, and a spin-coating time being 50 seconds, and the thickness of the spin-coated film being about 1 micron. The resulting mixture was placed in a vacuum dryer for 1 hour until the solvent was well evaporated, followed by the electrochemical transfer for next step.

    [0050] The method may further comprise step S3: The electrolyte for electrochemically stripping is a Na.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous solution with a concentration of 1 mol/L; wherein, the electrolysis voltage is 3V; the anode is a Pt electrode; the cathode is a composite structure sample composed of a Cu substrate and a graphene polymer film. The schematic diagram of the electrolysis process is shown in FIG. 2. In FIG. 2, ref.1 indicates an electrolytic cell, ref.2 indicates an electrolyte solution, ref.3 indicates a copper substrate for graphene growth, ref.4 indicates graphene, ref.5 indicates PMMA, ref.6 indicates a PS film, and ref.7 indicates a platinum anode.

    [0051] In this embodiment, the solvent for selectively dissolving the top PS film is cyclohexene, and the polystyrene was dissolved, by the addition of a small amount of n-hexane followed by slow addition of cyclohexene. N-hexane has a low surface tension and density, and the composite film can be well spread at the interface of the solvent; in addition, n-hexane does not cause dissolution and damage to PS and PMMA, and has a very good mutual solubility with cyclohexene. The cyclohexene that was slowly added was dissolved with n-hexane, such that the upper PS film was dissolved slowly and uniformly. The composite film is in a very flat state throughout the process without wrinkles. The schematic diagram of the dissolution process is shown in FIG. 3. In FIG. 3, ref.1 indicates an electrolytic cell, ref.2 indicates an electrolyte solution, ref.3 indicates graphene, ref.4 indicates a PMMA film, ref.1 indicates a PS film, ref.6 indicates n-hexane, and ref.7 indicates cyclohexene; and the photo of the dissolution process is shown in FIG. 4.

    [0052] The method may further comprise step S4: After washed with deionized water, the transfer process was completed, by using Si/SiO.sub.2 as the target substrate and finally dissolving the thin PMMA film with acetone.

    [0053] An optical microscope photograph of graphene obtained by a conventional electrochemical transfer process is shown in FIG. 5. As seen from FIG. 5, many wrinkles and holes were generated. The graphene obtained by the transfer method according to this embodiment, by contrast, maintained integrity, clean and no breakage occurred, which can be seen from the optical microscope photograph shown in FIG. 6.

    [0054] While preferred embodiments of the present disclosure have been described herein, those skilled in the art can make additional changes and modifications to these embodiments once they know the basic inventive concepts. Therefore, the appended claims are intended to cover the preferred embodiments and all such variations and modifications as fall within the true spirit of the disclosure. It will be obvious that those skilled in the art can make various changes and variations to the present disclosure without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. Accordingly, if these modifications and variations of the present disclosure fall within the scope of the claims appended in the present disclosure and equivalents thereof, the present disclosure also intends to embrace these modifications and variations.