Large area and structured epitaxial graphene produced by confinement controlled sublimation of silicon carbide
Walt. A. de Heer, Claire Berger, Ming Ruan, Mike Sprinkle, Xuebin Li,, Yike Hu, Baiqian Zhang, John Hankinson, Edward H. Conrad

TL;DR
This paper discusses a novel confinement controlled sublimation (CCS) method for producing high-quality, large-area, structured epitaxial graphene on silicon carbide, advancing its potential for electronics and fundamental physics research.
Contribution
The paper introduces the CCS technique for growing high-quality, structured epitaxial graphene on SiC, improving quality and enabling nano-patterned structures for electronic applications.
Findings
High-quality graphene achieved on SiC using CCS
Graphene layers exhibit high mobility and decoupling
Structured graphene suitable for next-generation electronics
Abstract
After the pioneering investigations into graphene-based electronics at Georgia Tech (GT), great strides have been made developing epitaxial graphene on silicon carbide (EG) as a new electronic material. EG has not only demonstrated its potential for large scale applications, it also has become an invaluable material for fundamental two-dimensional electron gas physics showing that only EG is on route to define future graphene science. It was long known that graphene mono and multilayers grow on SiC crystals at high temperatures in ultra-high vacuum. At these temperatures, silicon sublimes from the surface and the carbon rich surface layer transforms to graphene. However the quality of the graphene produced in ultrahigh vacuum is poor due to the high sublimation rates at relatively low temperatures. The GT team developed growth methods involving encapsulating the SiC crystals in graphite…
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