Login:   Password:
Not Register?    Sign Up NOW!
Date: 20 November 2009
Google
 
New Graphene-Based Material Clarifies Graphite Oxide Chemistry  
Topic Name: New Graphene-Based Material Clarifies Graphite Oxide Chemistry
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Category: Nanobiotechnology

Research persons: Professor Rod Ruoff

Location: Austin, United States

Details

A new "graphene-based" material that helps solve the structure of graphite oxide and could lead to other potential discoveries of the one-atom thick substance called graphene, which has applications in nanoelectronics, energy storage and production, and transportation such as airplanes and cars, has been created by researchers at The University of Texas at Austin. To get an idea of the nanomaterial graphene, imagine a lightweight material having the strongest chemical bond in nature and, thus, exceptional mechanical properties. In addition it conducts heat better than any other material and has charge carriers moving through it at a significant fraction of the speed of light. Just an atom thick, graphene consists of a "chickenwire" (or honeycomb) bonding arrangement of carbon atoms—also known as a single layer of graphite. Mechanical Engineering Professor Rod Ruoff and his co-authors have, for the first time, prepared carbon-13 labeled graphite. They did this by first making graphite that had every "normal" carbon atom having the isotope carbon-12, which is magnetically inactive, replaced with carbon-13, which is magnetically active. They then converted that to carbon-13 labeled graphite oxide and used solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance to discern the detailed chemical structure of graphite oxide. "As a result of our work published in Science, it will now be possible for scientists and engineers to create different types of graphene (by using carbon-13 labeled graphene as the starting material and doing further chemistry to it) and to study such graphene-based materials with solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance to obtain their detailed chemical structure," Ruoff says. "This includes situations such as where the graphene is mixed with a polymer and chemically bonded at critical locations to make remarkable polymer matrix composites; or embedded in glass or ceramic materials; or used in nanoelectronic components; or mixed with an electrolyte to provide superior supercapacitor or battery performance. If we don't know the chemistry in detail, we won't be able to optimize properties." Graphene-based materials are a focus area of research at the university because they are expected to have applications for ultra-strong yet lightweight materials that could be used in automobiles and airplanes to improve fuel efficiency, the blades of wind turbines for improved generation of electrical power, as critical components in nanoelectronics that could have blazing speeds but very low power consumption, for electrical energy storage in batteries and supercapacitors to enable renewable energy production at a large scale and in transparent conductive films that will be used in solar cells and image display technology. In almost every application, sensitive chemical interactions with surrounding materials will play a central role in understanding and optimizing performance. Ruoff and his team proved they had made such an isotopically labeled material from measurements by co-author Frank Stadermann of Washington University in St Louis. Stadermann used a special mass spectrometer typically used for measuring the isotope abundances of various elements that are in micrometeorites that have landed on Earth. Then, 100 percent carbon-13 labeled graphite was converted to 100 percent carbon-13 labeled graphite oxide, also a layered material but with some oxygen atoms attached to the graphene by chemical bonds. Co-authors Yoshitaka Ishii and Medhat Shaibat of the University of Illinois-Chicago then used solid state nuclear magnetic resonance to help reveal the detailed chemical bonding network in graphite oxide. Ruoff says even though graphite oxide was first synthesized more than150 years ago the distribution of oxygen atoms has been debated even quite recently. "The ability to control the isotopic labeling between carbon-12 and carbon-13 will lead to many other sorts of studies," says Ruoff, who holds the Cockrell Family Regents Chair in Engineering #7. He collaborates on other graphene projects with other university scientists and engineers such as Allan MacDonald (Departments of Physics and Astronomy), Sanjay Banerjee, Emanuel Tutuc and Bhagawan Sahu (Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering) and Gyeong Hwang (Department of Chemical Engineering), and some of these collaborations include industrial partners such as Texas Instruments, IBM and others. Co-authors on the Science article include: Weiwei Cai, Richard Piner, Sungjin Park, Dongxing Yang, Aruna Velamakanni, Meryl Stoller and Jinho An (all of the Ruoff research group at The University of Texas at Austin); Sung Jin An, formerly of Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH-Korea) and a visiting graduate student in the Ruoff group during the study; Dongmin Chen (Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences); Stadermann; and Ishii and Shaibat of the University of Illinois-Chicago.


Tags: Atom - carbon-13 - ceramic materials - chickenwire - electrolyte - graphene - graphite - Graphite Oxide Chemistry - honeycomb - isotope carbon-12 - Magnetic - magnetic resonance - nanoelectronic - New Graphene-Based Material - Oxide - oxygen atom -
Research Documents:
Related research: A Better Way to Make Nano Stuff, Durable molds could serve as a practical manufacturing tool in making nano devices., a new method for controlling the self-assembly of nanometer and micrometer-sized particles, ANL Researchers Unveiled How Nanocluster Contaminants Increase Risk of Spreading Using Advanced Photon Source, Antimicrobial properties of nanotubes, Bacteria with the mini-genomes for optimized biotechnological uses, Bioengineers have discovered chemical reactions in a single living cell for the first time, BNL Researchers Used DNA for the First time to Yields 3-D Crystalline Organization of Nanoparticles, Carbon-Nanotube Memory that Really Competes, Cheap, Self-Assembling Optics: Researchers have made new nano building blocks for optical computing and solar-cell coatings., Cooling Chips with Thermoelectrics: Researchers have made ultrathin refrigerators for microprocessors., Development of Measurement Set-up for Electromechanical Analysis of Bucky Paper Actuators, sheets of Carbon Nanotubes, Human health and environmental impacts of nanotechnology are a bigger worry for scientists than for the public, LLNL Researchers Detected a Signature for Water inside Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes, MIT develops thin-film 'micro pharmacy' may be used to deliver drugs for cancer, epilepsy, diabetes and other diseases, Nanobiotechnology Research Featured in Prominent Journals, Nanonets-To Convert Solar Energy Into Hydrogen, New light on the underlying mechanism for abnormal development of the neural system, New tool for biological systems, NSET brings a new strategic plan for the work of the National Nanotechnology Initiative, NSF funding launches Nanobiotechnology Center at Cornell, Penn Engineers Create Carbon Nanopipettes that may useful for Concurrently Measuring Electrical Signals of Cells during Fluid Injection, Penn Engineers has Constructed a Theoretical Model to Predict the Strength of Metals at the Nanoscale, Surface Dislocation Nucleation, Phase Transitions Induced by Nanoconfinement in Liquid Water: novel way to control water behavior, Remote-control nanoparticles deliver drugs directly into tumors: Developed by MIT Scientists, Researcher bounce bullets without a trace of damage using carbon nanotechnology

Add Research

Full Name *
Email address *
Location
Your Research *

 
Home | Members.Benefit | Privacy.Policy | Bookmark.This.Page | Contact.Us
© 2006 - 2007 4engr. All Rights reserved

|Conveyor technology