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      Free-standing graphene at atomic resolution.

      Nature nanotechnology
      Carbon, chemistry, Electric Conductivity, Electrochemistry, methods, Electrons, Energy Transfer, Materials Testing, Models, Chemical, Nanostructures, ultrastructure, Polycyclic Hydrocarbons, Aromatic, Quantum Theory, Spectroscopy, Electron Energy-Loss, Thermodynamics

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          Abstract

          Research interest in graphene, a two-dimensional crystal consisting of a single atomic plane of carbon atoms, has been driven by its extraordinary properties, including charge carriers that mimic ultra-relativistic elementary particles. Moreover, graphene exhibits ballistic electron transport on the submicrometre scale, even at room temperature, which has allowed the demonstration of graphene-based field-effect transistors and the observation of a room-temperature quantum Hall effect. Here we confirm the presence of free-standing, single-layer graphene with directly interpretable atomic-resolution imaging combined with the spatially resolved study of both the pi --> pi* transition and the pi + sigma plasmon. We also present atomic-scale observations of the morphology of free-standing graphene and explore the role of microstructural peculiarities that affect the stability of the sheets. We also follow the evolution and interaction of point defects and suggest a mechanism by which they form ring defects.

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