Direct localized growth of graphene on a substrate: a novel nickel-catalyzed CVD process assisted by H2 plasma

Nanoscale Adv. 2024 Sep 30. doi: 10.1039/d4na00508b. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

An original metal catalyzed CVD methodology assisted by hydrogen plasma for the direct deposition of few-layer graphene on a substrate is presented. Graphene is grown at 900 °C directly on the surface of the substrate of technological interest by carbon diffusion through a nickel film by using methane (CH4) as the carbon precursor. Hydrogen atoms in the H2-plasma downstream are used to promote the solubilization of carbon atoms in Ni, thus favouring the growth of graphene at the Ni/substrate interface. Structural and transport properties of the as-grown multilayer graphene films on SiO2/Si and quartz substrates are provided. We demonstrate the peculiarity of this approach for controlling the thickness and transport properties of as-grown graphene films using process-step times. Finally, the potential of the proposed methodology for the bottom-up direct growth of patterned graphene is demonstrated.