Increased permeability of oxygen atoms through graphene with ripples.
@article{He2017IncreasedPO,
title={Increased permeability of oxygen atoms through graphene with ripples.},
author={Guangyu He and Tao Liang and Qi Wang and Mingsheng Xu and Yingchun Liu},
journal={Soft matter},
year={2017},
volume={13 21},
pages={
3994-4000
}
}Graphene is an ideal membrane for selective separation because of its unique properties and single-layer structure. Considerable efforts have been made to alter the permeability of graphene. In this study, we investigate the pathways for an oxygen atom to pass through graphene sheets. We also identify the effect of the ripple's curvature in graphene sheets on the energy barrier of permeation through density functional theory calculations. Results show that oxygen atoms can easily pass through…
6 Citations
Tuning the nanoscale rippling of graphene with PEGylated gold nanoparticles and ion irradiation
- Chemistry
- 2021
Coat multi-layered graphene on Cu with radiofrequency plasmas for anti-oxidization in hot air
- Materials Science
- 2021
Strain engineering of two-dimensional materials for advanced electrocatalysts
- Materials Science
- 2021
Confined local oxygen gas promotes electrochemical water oxidation to hydrogen peroxide
- ChemistryNature Catalysis
- 2020
Electrochemical two-electron water oxidation is a promising route for renewable and on-site H 2 O 2 generation as an alternative to the anthraquinone process. However, it is currently restricted by…
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 42 REFERENCES
Permeation through graphene ripples
- Physics
- 2017
Real graphene sheets show limited anti-permeation performance deviating from the ideally flat honeycomb carbon lattice that is impermeable to gases. Ripples in graphene are prevalent and they could…
Role of hydrogen in graphene chemical vapor deposition growth on a copper surface.
- PhysicsJournal of the American Chemical Society
- 2014
An insightful understanding reveals a crucial role of H in graphene CVD growth and paves a way for the controllable synthesis of BLG or FLG, and provides a reasonable explanation for the hydrogen pressure-dependent grapheneCVD growth behaviors on a Cu surface.
Bilayer Graphene Growth via a Penetration Mechanism
- Physics
- 2014
From both fundamental and technical points of view, precise control of the layer number of graphene samples is very important. To reach this goal, atomic-scale mechanisms of multilayer graphene…
How the Orientation of Graphene Is Determined during Chemical Vapor Deposition Growth
- Physics
- 2012
We present a theoretical study on the determination of graphene orientation on the catalyst surface in chemical vapor deposition growth. Our study reveals that the interaction between the graphene…
Intrinsic ripples in graphene.
- PhysicsNature materials
- 2007
It is found that ripples spontaneously appear owing to thermal fluctuations with a size distribution peaked around 80 A which is compatible with experimental findings and might be due to the multiplicity of chemical bonding in carbon.
Graphene-based membranes.
- EngineeringChemical Society reviews
- 2015
This tutorial review aims to present the latest groundbreaking advances in both the theoretical and experimental chemical science and engineering of graphene-based membranes, including their design, fabrication and application.
Atomistic mechanisms for bilayer growth of graphene on metal substrates
- Physics
- 2015
Epitaxial growth on metal substrates has been shown to be the most powerful approach in producing large-scale high-quality monolayer graphene, yet it remains a major challenge to realize uniform…
First principles study of the permeability of graphene to hydrogen atoms.
- Physics, Materials SciencePhysical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP
- 2013
While protons can readily pass through a graphene sheet with a low tunneling barrier, for hydrogen atoms the barriers are substantially higher, and the presence of defects in the membrane can significantly reduce the penetration barrier in a region that extends beyond the defect site itself.
Porous graphene as the ultimate membrane for gas separation.
- Materials ScienceNano letters
- 2009
Porous graphene sheets are proposed as one-atom-thin, highly efficient, and highly selective membranes for gas separation, which could have widespread impact on numerous energy and technological applications; including carbon sequestration, fuel cells, and gas sensors.
Graphene on Ru(0001): a 25 x 25 supercell.
- Chemistry, PhysicsPhysical review letters
- 2008
Strong intensity oscillations in the superstructure rods demonstrate that the Ru substrate is also significantly corrugated down to several monolayers and that the bonding between graphene and Ru is strong and cannot be caused by van der Waals bonds.