Understanding controls on interfacial wetting at epitaxial graphene: Experiment and theory
Article 2012 en
Authors
HZ
Hua Zhou
PG
Panchapakesan Ganesh
VP
Volker Presser
Abstract
1 min read
The interaction of interfacial water with graphitic carbon at the atomic scale is studied as a function of the hydrophobicity of epitaxial graphene. High resolution x-ray reflectivity shows that the graphene-water contact angle is controlled by the average graphene thickness, due to the fraction of the film surface expressed as the epitaxial buffer layer whose contact angle (contact angle \ensuremath{\theta}${}_{\mathrm{c}}$ $=$ 73\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}) is substantially smaller than that of multilayer graphene (\ensuremath{\theta}${}_{c}$ $=$ 93\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}). Classical and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations show that the reduced contact angle of the buffer layer is due to both its epitaxy with the SiC substrate and the presence of interfacial defects. This insight clarifies the relationship between interfacial water structure and hydrophobicity, in general, and suggests new routes to control interface properties of epitaxial graphene.
Johan Gustafson, Andrea Resta, Anders Mikkelsen, Rasmus Westerström, J. N. Andersen, Edvin Lundgren, Jonas Weissenrieder, Michael Schmid, П. Варга, N. Kasper, X. Torrelles, S. Ferrer, Florian Mittendorfer, Kresse Georg
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