Suspended graphene membranes to control Au nucleation and growth
Joachim Dahl Thomsen, Kate Reidy, Thang Pham, Julian Klein, Anna, Osherov, Rami Dana, Frances M. Ross

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that suspended graphene membranes can significantly reduce gold nucleation density compared to supported graphene, enabling controlled metal growth for advanced nanomaterials applications.
Contribution
It reveals how suspended graphene can be used to control metal nucleation density, a novel approach for patterning metals on 2D materials without lithography.
Findings
Ultra-low nucleation densities achieved on suspended graphene
Nucleation density 2-3 orders higher on supported substrates
Nucleation and diffusion are highly sensitive to graphene thickness
Abstract
Control of nucleation sites is an important goal in materials growth: nuclei in regular arrays may show emergent photonic or electronic behavior, and once the nuclei coalesce into thin films, the nucleation density influences parameters such as surface roughness, stress, and grain boundary structure. Tailoring substrate properties to control nucleation is therefore a powerful tool for designing functional thin films and nanomaterials. Here, we examine nucleation control for metals deposited on two-dimensional (2D) materials in a situation where substrate effects are absent and heterogeneous nucleation sites are minimized. Through quantification of faceted, epitaxial Au island nucleation on graphene, we show that ultra-low nucleation densities with nuclei several micrometers apart can be achieved on suspended graphene under conditions where we measure the nucleation density to be 2-3…
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