Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Douglas S Galvao
Graphone (one-side hydrogenated graphene) formation on different substrates Online
2016.
@online{Woellner2016b,
title = {Graphone (one-side hydrogenated graphene) formation on different substrates},
author = {Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto, Douglas S Galvao},
url = {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.09235},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-06-29},
abstract = {In this work we present a fully atomistic reactive (ReaxFF force field) molecular dynamics study of the structural and dynamical aspects of the one-side hydrogenation of graphene membranes, leading to the formation of the so-called graphone structure. We have considered different substrates: graphene, few-layers graphene, graphite and platinum at different temperatures. Our results showed that the hydrogenation rates are very dependent on the substrate and thermal effects. Our results also showed that, similarly to graphane, large hydrogenated domains are unlikely to be formed. These hydrogenation processes occur through the formation of uncorrelated cluster domains.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {online}
}
Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Douglas S. Galvao
One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects Journal Article
In: MRS Advances, vol. 2016, 2016.
@article{Woellner2016b,
title = {One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects},
author = {Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto, Douglas S. Galvao},
url = {http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=10234793&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S2059852116001961},
doi = {DOI: 10.1557/adv.2016.196},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-03-01},
journal = {MRS Advances},
volume = {2016},
abstract = {Recent studies on graphene hydrogenation processes showed that hydrogenation occurs via island growing domains, however how the substrate can affect the hydrogenation dynamics and/or pattern formation has not been yet properly investigated. In this work we have addressed these issues through fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated the structural and dynamical aspects of the hydrogenation of graphene membranes (one-side hydrogenation, the so called graphone structure) on different substrates (graphene, few-layers graphene, graphite and platinum). Our results also show that the observed hydrogenation rates are very sensitive to the substrate type. For all investigated cases, the largest fraction of hydrogenated carbon atoms was for platinum substrates. Our results also show that a significant number of randomly distributed H clusters are formed during the early stages of the hydrogenation process, regardless of the type of substrate. These results suggest that, similarly to graphane formation, large perfect graphone-like domains are unlikely to be formed. These findings are especially important since experiments have showed that cluster formation influences the electronic transport properties in hydrogenated graphene.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Woellner, Cristiano Francisco; Autreto, Pedro Alves da Silva; Galvao, Douglas S
One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects Online
2016, visited: 18.01.2016, ((ArXiv preprint)).
@online{Woellner2016,
title = {One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects},
author = {Woellner, Cristiano Francisco and Autreto, Pedro Alves da Silva and Galvao, Douglas S},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.04484},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-18},
urldate = {2016-01-18},
abstract = {Recent studies on graphene hydrogenation processes showed that hydrogenation occurs
via island growing domains, however how the substrate can affect the hydrogenation dynamics
and/or pattern formation has not been yet properly investigated. In this work we have addressed
these issues through fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated
the structural and dynamical aspects of the hydrogenation of graphene membranes (one-side
hydrogenation, the so called graphone structure) on different substrates (graphene, few-layers
graphene, graphite and platinum). Our results also show that the observed hydrogenation rates
are very sensitive to the substrate type. For all investigated cases, the largest fraction of
hydrogenated carbon atoms was for platinum substrates. Our results also show that a significant
number of randomly distributed H clusters are formed during the early stages of the
hydrogenation process, regardless of the type of substrate and temperature. These results suggest
that, similarly to graphane formation, large perfect graphone-like domains are unlikely to be
formed. These findings are especially important since experiments have showed that cluster
formation influences the electronic transport properties in hydrogenated graphene.},
note = {(ArXiv preprint)},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {online}
}
via island growing domains, however how the substrate can affect the hydrogenation dynamics
and/or pattern formation has not been yet properly investigated. In this work we have addressed
these issues through fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated
the structural and dynamical aspects of the hydrogenation of graphene membranes (one-side
hydrogenation, the so called graphone structure) on different substrates (graphene, few-layers
graphene, graphite and platinum). Our results also show that the observed hydrogenation rates
are very sensitive to the substrate type. For all investigated cases, the largest fraction of
hydrogenated carbon atoms was for platinum substrates. Our results also show that a significant
number of randomly distributed H clusters are formed during the early stages of the
hydrogenation process, regardless of the type of substrate and temperature. These results suggest
that, similarly to graphane formation, large perfect graphone-like domains are unlikely to be
formed. These findings are especially important since experiments have showed that cluster
formation influences the electronic transport properties in hydrogenated graphene.
2016

Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Douglas S Galvao
Graphone (one-side hydrogenated graphene) formation on different substrates Online
2016.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Graphene, graphone, Molecular Dynamics
@online{Woellner2016b,
title = {Graphone (one-side hydrogenated graphene) formation on different substrates},
author = {Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto, Douglas S Galvao},
url = {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.09235},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-06-29},
abstract = {In this work we present a fully atomistic reactive (ReaxFF force field) molecular dynamics study of the structural and dynamical aspects of the one-side hydrogenation of graphene membranes, leading to the formation of the so-called graphone structure. We have considered different substrates: graphene, few-layers graphene, graphite and platinum at different temperatures. Our results showed that the hydrogenation rates are very dependent on the substrate and thermal effects. Our results also showed that, similarly to graphane, large hydrogenated domains are unlikely to be formed. These hydrogenation processes occur through the formation of uncorrelated cluster domains.},
keywords = {Graphene, graphone, Molecular Dynamics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {online}
}

Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Douglas S. Galvao
One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects Journal Article
In: MRS Advances, vol. 2016, 2016.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Graphane, Graphene, graphone, Molecular Dynamics
@article{Woellner2016b,
title = {One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects},
author = {Cristiano Francisco Woellner, Pedro Alves da Silva Autreto, Douglas S. Galvao},
url = {http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=10234793&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S2059852116001961},
doi = {DOI: 10.1557/adv.2016.196},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-03-01},
journal = {MRS Advances},
volume = {2016},
abstract = {Recent studies on graphene hydrogenation processes showed that hydrogenation occurs via island growing domains, however how the substrate can affect the hydrogenation dynamics and/or pattern formation has not been yet properly investigated. In this work we have addressed these issues through fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated the structural and dynamical aspects of the hydrogenation of graphene membranes (one-side hydrogenation, the so called graphone structure) on different substrates (graphene, few-layers graphene, graphite and platinum). Our results also show that the observed hydrogenation rates are very sensitive to the substrate type. For all investigated cases, the largest fraction of hydrogenated carbon atoms was for platinum substrates. Our results also show that a significant number of randomly distributed H clusters are formed during the early stages of the hydrogenation process, regardless of the type of substrate. These results suggest that, similarly to graphane formation, large perfect graphone-like domains are unlikely to be formed. These findings are especially important since experiments have showed that cluster formation influences the electronic transport properties in hydrogenated graphene.
},
keywords = {Graphane, Graphene, graphone, Molecular Dynamics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

Woellner, Cristiano Francisco; Autreto, Pedro Alves da Silva; Galvao, Douglas S
One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects Online
2016, visited: 18.01.2016, ((ArXiv preprint)).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Graphane, Graphene, graphone, Molecular Dynamics
@online{Woellner2016,
title = {One Side-Graphene Hydrogenation (Graphone): Substrate Effects},
author = {Woellner, Cristiano Francisco and Autreto, Pedro Alves da Silva and Galvao, Douglas S},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.04484},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-18},
urldate = {2016-01-18},
abstract = {Recent studies on graphene hydrogenation processes showed that hydrogenation occurs
via island growing domains, however how the substrate can affect the hydrogenation dynamics
and/or pattern formation has not been yet properly investigated. In this work we have addressed
these issues through fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated
the structural and dynamical aspects of the hydrogenation of graphene membranes (one-side
hydrogenation, the so called graphone structure) on different substrates (graphene, few-layers
graphene, graphite and platinum). Our results also show that the observed hydrogenation rates
are very sensitive to the substrate type. For all investigated cases, the largest fraction of
hydrogenated carbon atoms was for platinum substrates. Our results also show that a significant
number of randomly distributed H clusters are formed during the early stages of the
hydrogenation process, regardless of the type of substrate and temperature. These results suggest
that, similarly to graphane formation, large perfect graphone-like domains are unlikely to be
formed. These findings are especially important since experiments have showed that cluster
formation influences the electronic transport properties in hydrogenated graphene.},
note = {(ArXiv preprint)},
keywords = {Graphane, Graphene, graphone, Molecular Dynamics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {online}
}
via island growing domains, however how the substrate can affect the hydrogenation dynamics
and/or pattern formation has not been yet properly investigated. In this work we have addressed
these issues through fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated
the structural and dynamical aspects of the hydrogenation of graphene membranes (one-side
hydrogenation, the so called graphone structure) on different substrates (graphene, few-layers
graphene, graphite and platinum). Our results also show that the observed hydrogenation rates
are very sensitive to the substrate type. For all investigated cases, the largest fraction of
hydrogenated carbon atoms was for platinum substrates. Our results also show that a significant
number of randomly distributed H clusters are formed during the early stages of the
hydrogenation process, regardless of the type of substrate and temperature. These results suggest
that, similarly to graphane formation, large perfect graphone-like domains are unlikely to be
formed. These findings are especially important since experiments have showed that cluster
formation influences the electronic transport properties in hydrogenated graphene.
http://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=95SvbM8AAAAJ