Mechanics of Adhered, Pressurized Graphene Blisters
Narasimha G. Boddeti, Steven P. Koenig, Rong Long, Jianliang Xiao, J., Scott Bunch, and Martin L. Dunn

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel experimental method to measure the adhesion energy of graphene membranes by analyzing pressurized blisters, combining thermodynamic modeling with experiments to provide accurate adhesion values.
Contribution
The study develops the constant N blister test, a new approach for quantifying adhesion energy between 2D materials and substrates, validated through experiments and theoretical analysis.
Findings
Average adhesion energy of 0.24 J/m² for graphene/SiO₂.
The constant N blister test aligns with traditional pressure tests in large microcavities.
The method offers a new way to understand membrane-substrate interactions.
Abstract
We study the mechanics of pressurized graphene membranes using an experimental configuration that allows the determination of the elasticity of graphene and the adhesion energy between a substrate and a graphene (or other two-dimensional solid) membrane. The test consists of a monolayer graphene membrane adhered to a substrate by surface forces. The substrate is patterned with etched microcavities of a prescribed volume and when they are covered with the graphene monolayer it traps a fixed number (N) of gas molecules in the microchamber. By lowering the ambient pressure, and thus changing the pressure difference across the graphene membrane, the membrane can be made to bulge and delaminate in a stable manner from the substrate. Here we describe the analysis of the membrane/substrate as a thermodynamic system and explore the behavior of the system over representative…
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