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Dejan Stekovic

Researcher at University of California, Riverside

Publications -  12
Citations -  151

Dejan Stekovic is an academic researcher from University of California, Riverside. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ferromagnetism & Graphene. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 11 publications receiving 115 citations.

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Large-scale cellulose-assisted transfer of graphene toward industrial applications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report a novel graphene transfer technique which provides a route to high-throughput, reliable and economical transfer of graphene without introducing large cracks and residue contamination from polymers, such as PMMA or magnetic impurities.
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Sublimation-assisted graphene transfer technique based on small polyaromatic hydrocarbons.

TL;DR: A naphthalene-assisted graphene transfer technique is reported which provides a reliable route to residue-free transfer of graphene to both hard and flexible substrates and has the potential to broaden the applications of CVD graphene in fields where ultraclean graphene and mild graphene transfer conditions are required.
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Band Structure Engineering by Substitutional Doping in Solid-State Solutions of [5-Me-PLY(O,O)]2B(1–x)Bex Radical Crystals

TL;DR: The substitutional doping of solid-state spiro-bis(5-methyl-1,9-oxido-phenalenyl)boron radical ([2]2B) is reported by co-crystallization of this radical with the corresponding spiro/sub 2Be compound, and at certain compositions the results provide a graphic picture of the structural transformations undergone by the lattice.
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Fe$_{5-x}$Ge$_2$Te$_2$ -- A new exfoliable itinerant ferromagnet with high Curie temperature and large perpendicular magnetic anisotropy.

TL;DR: In this paper, a new metallic vdW ferromagnets, Fe5-xGe2Te2 or FG2T, was successfully synthesized and fully characterized, which is a metal that orders ferromagnetically with a very sharp transition at 250 K (bulk and single crystal thin flakes) and shows large PMA, as found by both experimental and computational studies.