“…[26,27] However, copper oxide-based metamaterials suffer from such shortcomings as, for example, high rates of agglomeration, low conductivity, and insufficial electrochemical stability. These could be overcome by synergistically combining CuO with, for example, conducting polymers, carbon nanotubes or graphene-based materials [28,29] using in situ modification of copper foam, [30] room temperature chemical synthesis, [31] high temperature annealing, [32] thermal oxidation of pre-synthesized copper nanowires, [33] facile solution-phase technique, [34] anodization in sodium bicarbonate solution, [35] thermal oxidation of copper foil in oxygen [36] and many other methods. [37] Such a plethora of available technologies naturally gave rise to many studies aimed to reveal the parameters that control the growth, with the central question: Is it possible to efficiently control the architecture, structure, and morphology of the growing material through the simple adjustment of the synthesis conditions?…”