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  • Mechanically-Assisted Electrochemical Production of Graphene Oxide

    Author(s)
    Yu, Pei
    Tian, Zhiming
    Lowe, Sean E
    Song, Jingchao
    Ma, Zhirui
    Wang, Xin
    Han, Zhao Jun
    Bao, Qaoliang
    Simon, George P
    Li, Dan
    Zhong, Yu Lin
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Zhong, Yulin
    Year published
    2016
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Graphene oxide (GO) is promising for a variety of applications due to its excellent dispersibility and processability. However, current chemical oxidation routes have several drawbacks, including the use of explosive oxidizing agents, residual metal ions contaminations, and the creation of irreparable hole defects on the GO sheet. The electrochemical exfoliation and oxidation of graphite is a potentially greener approach without the need for extensive purification steps. Most reported electrochemical methods employ a single preformed bulk graphite as electrode, which limits their scalability, reproducibility, and degree of ...
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    Graphene oxide (GO) is promising for a variety of applications due to its excellent dispersibility and processability. However, current chemical oxidation routes have several drawbacks, including the use of explosive oxidizing agents, residual metal ions contaminations, and the creation of irreparable hole defects on the GO sheet. The electrochemical exfoliation and oxidation of graphite is a potentially greener approach without the need for extensive purification steps. Most reported electrochemical methods employ a single preformed bulk graphite as electrode, which limits their scalability, reproducibility, and degree of oxidation. Herein, we reported a novel mechanically assisted electrochemical method to produce graphene oxide directly from graphite flakes. The electrochemically derived graphene oxide (EGO) shows a good degree of oxidation but with less physical defects than chemically derived graphene oxide (CGO). EGO has good dispersibility in water and various solvents and, in particular, displays better long-term stability in ethanol when compared with CGO. Notably, unlike conventional CGO, EGO can undergo facile thermal conversion at 200 °C in air to conductive thermally processed EGO, which is highly desirable for heat/chemical-sensitive applications.
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    Journal Title
    Chemistry of Materials
    Volume
    28
    Issue
    22
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.6b04415
    Subject
    Electrochemistry
    Inorganic materials (incl. nanomaterials)
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/100606
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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