Role of structure of C-terminated 4H-SiC(000) surface in growth of graphene layers - transmission electron microscopy and density functional theory studies
Jolanta Borysiuk, Jakub So{\l}tys, Rafal Bo\.zek, Jacek Piechota,, Stanislaw Krukowski, Wlodzimierz Strupinski, Jacek M. Baranowski, Roman, Stepniewski

TL;DR
This study combines microscopy and density functional theory to explore how the atomic structure of C-terminated 4H-SiC surfaces influences graphene growth and defect formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the atomic-scale mechanisms of graphene growth on SiC surfaces, linking surface morphology to defect creation and atom diffusion processes.
Findings
Surface morphology affects defect formation in graphene.
Diffusion of atoms is possible at high temperatures (~1600°C).
Buffer layers influence graphene layer growth.
Abstract
Principal structural defects in graphene layers, synthesized on a carbon-terminated face, i.e. the SiC(000) face of a 4H-SiC substrate, are investigated using microscopic methods. Results of high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) reveal their atomic arrangement. Mechanism of such defects creation, directly related to the underlying crystallographic structure of the SiC substrate, is elucidated. The connection between the 4H-SiC(000) surface morphology, including the presence of the single atomic steps, the sequences of atomic steps, and also the macrosteps, and the corresponding emergence of planar defective structure (discontinuities of carbon layers and wrinkles) is revealed. It is shown that disappearance of the multistep island leads to the creation of wrinkles in the graphene layers. The density functional theory (DFT) calculation results show that the diffusion…
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