Diverse technologies from catalyst coking to graphene synthesis entail hydrocarbon
dehydrogenation and condensation reactions on metals and assembly into carbon
overlayers. Imperative to gaining control over these processes, through thermal
steering of the formation of polyaryl intermediates and the controlled prevention
of coking, is the exploration and elucidation of the detailed reaction scheme that
starts with adsorbed hydrocarbons and culminates with the formation of extended graphene.
Here we use scanning tunneling microscopy, high-resolution electron energy loss and
thermal desorption spectroscopies, in combination with theoretical simulations to
uncover the hierarchy of pathways and intermediates underlying the catalyzed evolution
of ethene adsorbed on Rh(111) to form graphene. These investigations allow formulation
of a reaction scheme whereby, upon heating, adsorbed ethene evolves via coupling
reactions to form segmented one-dimensional polyaromatic hydrocarbons (1D-PAH).
Further heating leads to dimensionality crossover (1D → 2D) and dynamical restructuring
processes at the PAH chain ends with subsequent activated detachment of size-selective
carbon clusters. Rate-limiting diffusional coalescence of these dynamically self-evolved
precursors culminates (≤1000 K) in condensation into graphene of high structural perfection.
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Diverse technologies from catalyst coking to graphene synthesis entail hydrocarbon
dehydrogenation and condensation reactions on metals and assembly into carbon
overlayers. Imperative to gaining control over these processes, through thermal
steering of the formation of polyaryl intermediates and the controlled prevention
of coking, is the exploration and elucidation of the detailed reaction scheme that
starts with adsorbed hydrocarbons and culminates with the formation of extended graphene....
»