Adrian T. Murdock
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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Publication
Featured researches published by Adrian T. Murdock.
ACS Nano | 2013
Adrian T. Murdock; Antal Adolf Koós; T. Ben Britton; Lothar Houben; Tim Batten; Tong Zhang; Angus J. Wilkinson; Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski; Christina E. Lekka; Nicole Grobert
We report that the shape, orientation, edge geometry, and thickness of chemical vapor deposition graphene domains can be controlled by the crystallographic orientations of Cu substrates. Under low-pressure conditions, single-layer graphene domains align with zigzag edges parallel to a single <101> direction on Cu(111) and Cu(101), while bilayer domains align to two directions on Cu(001). Under atmospheric pressure conditions, hexagonal domains also preferentially align. This discovery can be exploited to generate high-quality, tailored graphene with controlled domain thickness, orientations, edge geometries, and grain boundaries.
ACS Nano | 2013
Rebecca J. Nicholls; Adrian T. Murdock; Joshua Tsang; Jude Britton; Timothy J. Pennycook; Antal Adolf Koós; Peter D. Nellist; Nicole Grobert; Jonathan R. Yates
Precise control of graphene properties is an essential step toward the realization of future graphene devices. Defects, such as individual nitrogen atoms, can strongly influence the electronic structure of graphene. Therefore, state-of-the-art characterization techniques, in conjunction with modern modeling tools, are necessary to identify these defects and fully understand the synthesized material. We have directly visualized individual substitutional nitrogen dopant atoms in graphene using scanning transmission electron microscopy and conducted complementary electron energy loss spectroscopy experiments and modeling which demonstrates the influence of the nitrogen atom on the carbon K-edge.
Nature Communications | 2015
Vitaliy Babenko; Adrian T. Murdock; Antal Adolf Koós; Jude Britton; Alison Crossley; Philip Holdway; Jonathan Moffat; Jian Huang; Jack A. Alexander-Webber; R. J. Nicholas; Nicole Grobert
Large-area synthesis of high-quality graphene by chemical vapour deposition on metallic substrates requires polishing or substrate grain enlargement followed by a lengthy growth period. Here we demonstrate a novel substrate processing method for facile synthesis of mm-sized, single-crystal graphene by coating polycrystalline platinum foils with a silicon-containing film. The film reacts with platinum on heating, resulting in the formation of a liquid platinum silicide layer that screens the platinum lattice and fills topographic defects. This reduces the dependence on the surface properties of the catalytic substrate, improving the crystallinity, uniformity and size of graphene domains. At elevated temperatures growth rates of more than an order of magnitude higher (120 μm min−1) than typically reported are achieved, allowing savings in costs for consumable materials, energy and time. This generic technique paves the way for using a whole new range of eutectic substrates for the large-area synthesis of 2D materials.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014
Antal Adolf Koós; Adrian T. Murdock; P. Nemes-Incze; Rebecca J. Nicholls; Andrew J. Pollard; Steve J. Spencer; A. G. Shard; Debdulal Roy; László Péter Biró; Nicole Grobert
We doped graphene in situ during synthesis from methane and ammonia on copper in a low-pressure chemical vapour deposition system, and investigated the effect of the synthesis temperature and ammonia concentration on the growth. Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to investigate the quality and nitrogen content of the graphene and demonstrated that decreasing the synthesis temperature and increasing the ammonia flow rate results in an increase in the concentration of nitrogen dopants up to ca. 2.1% overall. However, concurrent scanning electron microscopy studies demonstrate that decreasing both the growth temperature from 1000 to 900 °C and increasing the N/C precursor ratio from 1/50 to 1/10 significantly decreased the growth rate by a factor of six overall. Using scanning tunnelling microscopy we show that the nitrogen was incorporated mainly in substitutional configuration, while current imaging tunnelling spectroscopy showed that the effect of the nitrogen on the density of states was visible only over a few atom distances.
Langmuir | 2014
Jude Britton; Nico E. A. Cousens; Samuel W. Coles; Christian D. van Engers; Vitaliy Babenko; Adrian T. Murdock; Antal Adolf Koós; Susan Perkin; Nicole Grobert
We report a method for transferring graphene, grown by chemical vapor deposition, which produces ultraflat graphene surfaces (root-mean-square roughness of 0.19 nm) free from polymer residues over macroscopic areas (>1 cm2). The critical step in preparing such surfaces involves the use of an intermediate mica template, which itself is atomically smooth. We demonstrate the compatibility of these model surfaces with the surface force balance, opening up the possibility of measuring normal and lateral forces, including friction and adhesion, between two graphene sheets either in contact or across a liquid medium. The conductivity of the graphene surfaces allows forces to be measured while controlling the surface potential. This new apparatus, the graphene surface force balance, is expected to be of importance to the future understanding of graphene in applications from lubrication to electrochemical energy storage systems.
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
Krisztián Kertész; Antal Adolf Koós; Adrian T. Murdock; Z. Vértesy; P. Nemes-Incze; P. J. Szabó; Z. E. Horváth; Levente Tapasztó; Chanyong Hwang; Nicole Grobert; L.P. Biró
Linearly polarized light microscopy (PM) revealed that graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on stepped Cu substrate may appear colored. The coloration is associated with the coupling of the light of 450–600 nm into propagating mode in the graphene layer when the electric vector (E→) of polarized light is parallel with the step edges and with the scattering when the E→ is normal to the step edges. PM is an inexpensive, fast, and contamination free method to efficiently visualize graphene and to map the step structure of Cu substrates used for large area CVD growth of graphene.
Nature Communications | 2018
Dong Han Seo; Shafique Pineda; Yun Chul Woo; Ming Xie; Adrian T. Murdock; Elisa Y. M. Ang; Yalong Jiao; Myoung Jun Park; Sung Il Lim; Malcolm A. Lawn; Fabricio Frizera Borghi; Zhao Jun Han; Stephen Gray; Graeme J. Millar; Aijun Du; Ho Kyong Shon; Teng Yong Ng; K. Ostrikov
The inability of membranes to handle a wide spectrum of pollutants is an important unsolved problem for water treatment. Here we demonstrate water desalination via a membrane distillation process using a graphene membrane where water permeation is enabled by nanochannels of multilayer, mismatched, partially overlapping graphene grains. Graphene films derived from renewable oil exhibit significantly superior retention of water vapour flux and salt rejection rates, and a superior antifouling capability under a mixture of saline water containing contaminants such as oils and surfactants, compared to commercial distillation membranes. Moreover, real-world applicability of our membrane is demonstrated by processing sea water from Sydney Harbour over 72 h with macroscale membrane size of 4 cm2, processing ~0.5 L per day. Numerical simulations show that the channels between the mismatched grains serve as an effective water permeation route. Our research will pave the way for large-scale graphene-based antifouling membranes for diverse water treatment applications.Intrinsic limitations of nanoporous graphene limit its applications in water treatment. Here the authors produce post-treatment-free, low-cost graphene-based membranes from renewable biomass and demonstrate their high water permeance and antifouling properties using real seawater.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Vitaliy Babenko; George Lane; Antal Adolf Koós; Adrian T. Murdock; Karwei So; Jude Britton; Jonathan Moffat; Nicole Grobert
Ammonia borane (AB) is among the most promising precursors for the large-scale synthesis of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) by chemical vapour deposition (CVD). Its non-toxic and non-flammable properties make AB particularly attractive for industry. AB decomposition under CVD conditions, however, is complex and hence has hindered tailored h-BN production and its exploitation. To overcome this challenge, we report in-depth decomposition studies of AB under industrially safe growth conditions. In situ mass spectrometry revealed a time and temperature-dependent release of a plethora of NxBy-containing species and, as a result, significant changes of the N:B ratio during h-BN synthesis. Such fluctuations strongly influence the formation and morphology of 2D h-BN. By means of in situ gas monitoring and regulating the precursor temperature over time we achieve uniform release of volatile chemical species over many hours for the first time, paving the way towards the controlled, industrially viable production of h-BN.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Vitaliy Babenko; George Lane; Antal Adolf Koós; Adrian T. Murdock; Karwei So; Jude Britton; Jonathan Moffat; Nicole Grobert
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML version of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.
Carbon | 2018
Zhao Jun Han; Chun Huang; Dominique Piche; Dong Han Seo; Shafique Pineda; Adrian T. Murdock; Peter S. Bruce; Patrick S. Grant; Nicole Grobert
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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View shared research outputsCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
View shared research outputsCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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