Controllable Freezing Transparency for Water Ice on Scalable Graphene Films on Copper
Bernhard Fickl, Teresa M. Seifried, Erwin Rait, Jakob Genser, Thomas, Wicht, Jani Kotakoski, G\"unther Rupprechter, Alois Lugstein, Dengsong Zhang,, Christian Dipolt, Hinrich Grothe, Dominik Eder, Bernhard C. Bayer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that scalable CVD graphene on copper can be transparent to water freezing, with functionalization enabling control over ice nucleation temperatures, offering new insights for ice formation control on metal surfaces.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of freezing transparency of graphene on copper and shows how functionalization can modulate ice nucleation behavior, filling a gap in experimental data on scalable graphene films.
Findings
CVD graphene on Cu is freezing transparent, not altering water freezing temperature.
Functionalization of graphene can control ice nucleation temperatures.
Scalable graphene/Cu platform enables control of ice formation on metals.
Abstract
Control of water ice formation on surfaces is of key technological and economic importance, but the fundamental understanding of ice nucleation and growth mechanisms and the design of surfaces for controlling water freezing behaviour remain incomplete. Graphene is a two-dimensional (2D) material that has been extensively studied for its peculiar wetting properties with liquid water incl. a heavily debated wetting transparency. Furthermore, graphene is the parent structure of soot particles that are heavily implicated as nuclei in atmospheric ice formation and consequently graphene is often used as a model surface for computational ice nucleation studies. Despite this, to date experimental reports on ice formation on scalable graphene films remain missing. Towards filling this gap, we here report on the water freezing behaviour on scalably grown chemical vapour deposited (CVD) graphene…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIcing and De-icing Technologies · Freezing and Crystallization Processes
