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RuoffRodney Scott

Ruoff, Rodney S.
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dc.citation.endPage 1298 -
dc.citation.number 3 -
dc.citation.startPage 1290 -
dc.citation.title CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS -
dc.citation.volume 36 -
dc.contributor.author Chatterjee, Shahana -
dc.contributor.author Abadie, Thomas -
dc.contributor.author Wang, Meihui -
dc.contributor.author Matar, Omar K. -
dc.contributor.author Ruoff, Rodney S. -
dc.date.accessioned 2024-05-21T14:35:09Z -
dc.date.available 2024-05-21T14:35:09Z -
dc.date.created 2024-01-30 -
dc.date.issued 2024-02 -
dc.description.abstract Although chemical vapor deposition (CVD) remains the method of choice for synthesizing defect-free and high-quality 2D films (such as graphene and h-BN), the method has serious issues with process repeatability and reproducibility. This makes it difficult to build up from the literature, test a hypothesis quickly, or scale up a process. The primary reason for this is that the CVD reactor, to this day, remains a black box with a reaction environment that is poorly understood and cannot be measured or monitored directly. Consequently, it is also difficult to study process kinetics and growth mechanisms and correlate experimental results to atomic-level simulations. A possible way to overcome this problem is to use computational fluid dynamics (CFD), both to identify the measurable external (process and reactor) parameters that control the reaction environment and to simulate this reaction environment and understand how it changes when these controllable external parameters are varied. This paper describes how this may be done in practice using the growth of single-layer graphene in a hot-wall tube reactor as the representative case and the CFD toolbox OpenFOAM. Based on our findings, we have shown why it is critical (1) to understand the flow properties inside the reactor and combine it with experimental results to study the growth process for graphene and other 2D films and (2) to measure, monitor, and report all relevant external parameters to ensure process repeatability and reproducibility. © 2024 American Chemical Society. -
dc.identifier.bibliographicCitation CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS, v.36, no.3, pp.1290 - 1298 -
dc.identifier.doi 10.1021/acs.chemmater.3c02361 -
dc.identifier.issn 0897-4756 -
dc.identifier.scopusid 2-s2.0-85182582645 -
dc.identifier.uri https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/82656 -
dc.identifier.wosid 001162237600001 -
dc.language 영어 -
dc.publisher American Chemical Society -
dc.title Repeatability and Reproducibility in the Chemical Vapor Deposition of 2D Films: A Physics-Driven Exploration of the Reactor Black Box -
dc.type Article -
dc.description.isOpenAccess FALSE -
dc.relation.journalWebOfScienceCategory Chemistry, Physical;Materials Science, Multidisciplinary -
dc.relation.journalResearchArea Chemistry;Materials Science -
dc.type.docType Article -
dc.description.journalRegisteredClass scie -
dc.description.journalRegisteredClass scopus -
dc.subject.keywordPlus GRAPHENE FILMS -
dc.subject.keywordPlus LARGE-AREA -
dc.subject.keywordPlus HEAT-TRANSFER -
dc.subject.keywordPlus FLOW -

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