» Articles » PMID: 34250333

Design of Experiments and Optimization of Laser-Induced Graphene

Overview
Journal ACS Omega
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2021 Jul 12
PMID 34250333
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Realization of graphene-based sensors and electronic devices remains challenging, in part due to integration challenges with current fabrication and manufacturing processes. Thus, scalable methods for in situ fabrication of high-quality graphene-like materials are essential. Low-cost CO laser engravers can be used for site-selective conversion of polyimide under ambient conditions to create 3-D, rotationally disordered, few-layer, porous, graphene-like electrodes. However, the influences of non-linear parameter terms and interactions between key parameters on the graphitization process present challenges for rapid, resource-efficient optimization. An iterative optimization strategy was developed to identify promising regions in parameter space for two key parameters, laser power and scan speed, with the goal of optimizing electrode performance while maximizing scan speed and hence fabrication throughput. The strategy employed iterations of Design of Experiments Response Surface (DoE-RS) methods combined with choices of readily measurable parameters to minimize measurement resources and time. The initial DoE-RS experiment set employed visual response parameters, while subsequent iterations used sheet resistance as the optimization parameter. The final model clearly demonstrates that laser graphitization through raster scanning is a highly non-linear process requiring polynomial terms in scan speed and laser power up to fifth order. Two regions of interest in parameter space were identified using this strategy: Region 1 represents the global minimum for sheet resistance for this laser (∼16 Ω/sq), found at a low scan speed (70 mm/s) and a low average power (2.1 W) . Region 2 is a local minimum for sheet resistance (36 Ω/sq), found at higher values for scan speed (340 mm/s) and average power (3.4 W), allowing ∼5-fold reduction in write time. Importantly, these minima do not correspond to constant ratios of average laser power to scan speed. This highlights the benefits of DoE-RS methods in rapid identification of optimum parameter combinations that would be difficult to discover using traditional one-factor-at-a-time optimization. Verification data from Raman spectroscopy showed sharp 2D peaks with mean full-width-at-half-maximum intensity values <80 cm for both regions, consistent with high-quality 3D graphene-like carbon. Graphene-based electrodes fabricated using the parameters from the respective regions yielded similar performance when employed as capacitive humidity sensors with hygroscopic dielectric layers. Devices fabricated using Region 1 parameters (16 Ω/sq) yielded capacitance responses of 0.78 ± 0.04 pF at 0% relative humidity (RH), increasing to 31 ± 7 pF at 85.1% RH. Region 2 devices (36 Ω/sq) showed comparable responses (0.88 ± 0.04 pF at 0% RH, 28 ± 5 pF at 85.1% RH).

Citing Articles

Soft Nanomembrane Sensor-Enabled Wearable Multimodal Sensing and Feedback System for Upper-Limb Sensory Impairment Assistance.

Kang T, Lee Y, Rigo B, Soltis I, Lee J, Kim H ACS Nano. 2025; 19(5):5613-5628.

PMID: 39888714 PMC: 11823636. DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.4c15530.


Boosting flexible laser-induced graphene supercapacitors performance through double pass laser processing.

Hamada A, Ryu Y, Velasco A, Gomez-Mancebo M, Fernandez Carretero S, Calle F iScience. 2025; 28(1):111696.

PMID: 39886470 PMC: 11780167. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.111696.


Optimizing Carbon Structures in Laser-Induced Graphene Electrodes Using Design of Experiments for Enhanced Electrochemical Sensing Characteristics.

Fantinelli Franco F, Malik M, Manjakkal L, Roshanghias A, Smith C, Gauchotte-Lindsay C ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2024; 16(47):65489-65502.

PMID: 39539231 PMC: 11615855. DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c13124.


Room Temperature Sensing of Volatile Organic Compounds Using Hybrid Layered SnO Mesoflowers and Laser-Induced Graphitic Carbon Devices.

Murray R, Muriqi A, Larrigy C, Russo A, Mengistu M, Iacopino D ACS Sustain Chem Eng. 2024; 12(41):15063-15076.

PMID: 39421636 PMC: 11481091. DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.4c04488.


Lab-on-a-lollipop (LoL) platform for preventing food-induced toxicity: all-in-one system for saliva sampling and electrochemical detection of vanillin.

Ma H, Khazaee Nejad S, Vargas Ramos D, Al-Shami A, Soleimani A, Amirghasemi F Lab Chip. 2024; 24(18):4306-4320.

PMID: 39207360 PMC: 11446580. DOI: 10.1039/d4lc00436a.


References
1.
Denmark S, Butler C . Vinylation of aromatic halides using inexpensive organosilicon reagents. Illustration of design of experiment protocols. J Am Chem Soc. 2008; 130(11):3690-704. PMC: 2768075. DOI: 10.1021/ja7100888. View

2.
Stanford M, Zhang C, Fowlkes J, Hoffman A, Ivanov I, Rack P . High-Resolution Laser-Induced Graphene. Flexible Electronics beyond the Visible Limit. ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020; 12(9):10902-10907. DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c01377. View

3.
Ye R, Chyan Y, Zhang J, Li Y, Han X, Kittrell C . Laser-Induced Graphene Formation on Wood. Adv Mater. 2017; 29(37). DOI: 10.1002/adma.201702211. View

4.
Eckmann A, Felten A, Mishchenko A, Britnell L, Krupke R, Novoselov K . Probing the nature of defects in graphene by Raman spectroscopy. Nano Lett. 2012; 12(8):3925-30. DOI: 10.1021/nl300901a. View

5.
Xia J, Chen F, Li J, Tao N . Measurement of the quantum capacitance of graphene. Nat Nanotechnol. 2009; 4(8):505-9. DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2009.177. View