Abstract

The evaluation of the wetting stability of supported graphene in ambient environment is important for its practical applications. Herein, it is shown by experiments that a monolayer graphene coating can alter the water contact angles of various substrates to a converged value around 80–85° in ambient environment, almost independent of substrate materials, graphene layer numbers as well as long‐term air exposure up to 14 months. First‐principles calculations and van der Waals modeling indicate that a monolayer graphene is sufficient to alter both short‐range and long‐range interactions of a water molecule with various substrates to a converged state. The stable wettability of graphene would facilitate its practical applications, ranging from functional coatings, liquid gated electronic devices, and other areas requiring its exposure to water.

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