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Macroscopic graphene membranes and their extraordinary stiffness

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arxiv 0805.1884 v4 pith:X364BE5Z submitted 2008-05-13 cond-mat.mes-hall cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Macroscopic graphene membranes and their extraordinary stiffness

classification cond-mat.mes-hall cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords graphenecurrentlyelectronmacroscopicmakingmembranesmicroscopysize
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The properties of suspended graphene are currently attracting enormous interest, but the small size of available samples and the difficulties in making them severely restrict the number of experimental techniques that can be used to study the optical, mechanical, electronic, thermal and other characteristics of this one-atom-thick material. Here we describe a new and highly-reliable approach for making graphene membranes of a macroscopic size (currently up to 100 microns in diameter) and their characterization by transmission electron microscopy. In particular, we have found that long graphene beams supported by one side only do not scroll or fold, in striking contrast to the current perception of graphene as a supple thin fabric, but demonstrate sufficient stiffness to support extremely large loads, millions of times exceeding their own weight, in agreement with the presented theory. Our work opens many avenues for studying suspended graphene and using it in various micromechanical systems and electron microscopy.

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