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Enhanced copper anticorrosion from Janus-doped bilayer graphene.

Mengze ZhaoZhibin ZhangWujun ShiYiwei LiChaowu XueYuxiong HuMingchao DingZhiqun ZhangZhi LiuYing FuCan LiuMuhong WuZhongkai LiuXin-Zheng LiZhu-Jun WangKai-Hui Liu
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The atomic-thick anticorrosion coating for copper (Cu) electrodes is essential for the miniaturisation in the semiconductor industry. Graphene has long been expected to be the ultimate anticorrosion material, however, its real anticorrosion performance is still under great controversy. Specifically, strong electronic couplings can limit the interfacial diffusion of corrosive molecules, whereas they can also promote the surficial galvanic corrosion. Here, we report the enhanced anticorrosion for Cu simply via a bilayer graphene coating, which provides protection for more than 5 years at room temperature and 1000 h at 200 °C. Such excellent anticorrosion is attributed to a nontrivial Janus-doping effect in bilayer graphene, where the heavily doped bottom layer forms a strong interaction with Cu to limit the interfacial diffusion, while the nearly charge neutral top layer behaves inertly to alleviate the galvanic corrosion. Our study will likely expand the application scenarios of Cu under various extreme operating conditions.
Keyphrases
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