Imaging Grains and Grain Boundaries in Single-Layer Graphene: An Atomic Patchwork Quilt
Pinshane Y. Huang (1), Carlos S. Ruiz-Vargas (1), Arend M. van der, Zande (1), William S. Whitney, Shivank Garg, Jonathan S. Alden, Caleb J., Hustedt, Ye Zhu, Jiwoong Park, Paul L. McEuen, David A. Muller

TL;DR
This study combines advanced electron microscopy techniques to map and analyze the atomic structure of grains and grain boundaries in single-layer graphene, revealing their impact on mechanical and electrical properties.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive method to visualize and characterize graphene grain boundaries at atomic resolution, bridging length scales previously unexplored.
Findings
Grain boundaries are mainly composed of pentagon-heptagon pairs.
Grain boundaries significantly weaken mechanical strength.
Electrical properties remain largely unaffected by grain boundaries.
Abstract
The properties of polycrystalline materials are often dominated by the size of their grains and by the atomic structure of their grain boundaries. These effects should be especially pronounced in 2D materials, where even a line defect can divide and disrupt a crystal. These issues take on practical significance in graphene, a hexagonal two-dimensional crystal of carbon atoms; Single-atom-thick graphene sheets can now be produced by chemical vapor deposition on up to meter scales, making their polycrystallinity almost unavoidable. Theoretically, graphene grain boundaries are predicted to have distinct electronic, magnetic, chemical, and mechanical properties which strongly depend on their atomic arrangement. Yet, because of the five-order-of-magnitude size difference between grains and the atoms at grain boundaries, few experiments have fully explored the graphene grain structure. Here,…
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