Graphene on copper is a system of high technological relevance, as Cu is one
of the most widely used substrates for the CVD growth of graphene. However,
very little is known about the details of their interaction. One approach to
gain such information is studying the superlattices emerging due to the
mismatch of the two crystal lattices. However, graphene on copper is a
low-corrugated system making both their experimental and theoretical study
highly challenging. Here, we report the observation of a new rotational Moire
superlattice of CVD graphene on Cu (111), characterized by a periodicity of
1.5±0.05 nm and corrugation of 0.15±0.05A˚ , as measured
by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy. To understand the observed superlattice we
have developed a newly parameterized Tersoff-potential for the graphene/Cu
(111) interface fitted to nonlocal van der Waals density functional theory
(DFT) calculations. The interfacial force field with time-lapsed CMD provides
superlattices in good quantitative agreement with the experimental results, for
a misorientation angle of 10.4±0.5,∘ without any further parameter
adjustment. Furthermore, the CMD simulations predict the existence of two
non-equivalent high-symmetry directions of the Moir\'e pattern that could also
be identified in the experimental STM images.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 2 table