1 research outputs found
Chemical Oxidation of Graphite: Evolution of the Structure and Properties
Graphene
oxide is a complex material whose synthesis is still incompletely
understood. To study the time evolution of structural and chemical
properties of oxidized graphite, samples at different temporal stages
of oxidation were selected and characterized through a number of techniques:
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy for the content and bonding of oxygen,
X-ray diffraction for the level of intercalation, Raman spectroscopy
for the detection of structural changes, electrical resistivity measurements
for probing charge localization on the macroscopic scale, and scanning
transmission electron microscopy for the atomic structure of the graphene
oxide flakes. We found a nonlinear behavior of oxygen uptake with
time where two concentration plateaus were identified: Uptake reached
20 at % in the first 15 min, and after 1 h a second uptake started,
reaching a highest oxygen concentration of >30 at % after 2 h of
oxidation.
At the same time, the interlayer distance expanded to more than twice
the value of graphite and the electrical resistivity increased by
seven orders of magnitude. After 4 days of chemical processing, the
expanded structure of graphite oxide became unstable and spontaneously
exfoliated; more than 2 weeks resulted in a significant decrease in
the oxygen content accompanied by reaggregation of the GO sheets.
These correlated measurements allow us to offer a comprehensive view
into the complex oxidation process