20 research outputs found

    Multifunctional graphene woven fabrics

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    Tailoring and assembling graphene into functional macrostructures with well-defined configuration are key for many promising applications. We report on a graphene-based woven fabric (GWF) prepared by interlacing two sets of graphene micron-ribbons where the ribbons pass each other essentially at right angles. By using a woven copper mesh as the template, the GWF grown from chemical vapour deposition retains the network configuration of the copper mesh. Embedded into polymer matrices, it has significant flexibility and strength gains compared with CVD grown graphene films. The GWFs display both good dimensional stability in both the warp and the weft directions and the combination of film transparency and conductivity could be optimized by tuning the ribbon packing density. The GWF creates a platform to integrate a large variety of applications, e.g., composites, strain sensors and solar cells, by taking advantages of the special structure and properties of graphene

    Titanium dioxide nanoparticles prepared by laser pyrolysis : synthesis and photocatalytic properties

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    TiO2 nanoparticles were synthesized via the laser pyrolysis of titanium tetrachloride-based gas-phase mixtures. In the obtained nanopowders, a mixture of anatase and rutile phases with mean particle size of about 14 nm was identified. Using the thermal heated laser nanopowders, mechanically stable films were produced by immobilizing titania nanopowders on glass substrates (the doctor blading method followed by compression). The photocatalytic activity of the prepared films was tested by the degradation of 4-chlorophenol in an aqueous solution under UV-illumination. By referring to known commercial samples (Degussa P25) similarly prepared, higher photocatalytic efficiency was found for the laser-prepared samples

    Scanning electrochemical cell microscopy platform for ultrasensitive photoelectrochemical imaging

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    The development of techniques for nanoscale structure–activity correlations is of major importance for the fundamental understanding and rational design of (photo)electrocatalysts. However, the low conversion efficiency of characteristic materials generates tiny photoelectrochemical currents at the submicrometer to nanoscale, in the fA range, which are challenging to detect and measure accurately. Here, we report the coupling of scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) with photoillumination, to create a submicrometer spatial resolution cell that opens up high resolution structure–(photo)activity measurements. We demonstrate the capabilities of the technique as a tool for: (i) high spatial resolution (photo)activity mapping using an ionic liquid electrolyte at a thin film of TiO2 aggregates, commonly used as a photoanode in dye sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) and (ii) in situ (photo)activity measurements of an electropolymerized conjugated polymer on a transparent Au substrate in a controlled atmospheric environment. Quantitative data, including localized (photo)electrochemical transients and external quantum efficiency (EQE), are extracted, and prospects for further technique development and enhancement are outlined
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