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Superflexibility of graphene oxide

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 04:11 authored by Philippe Poulin, Rouhollah Jalili, Wilfrid Neri, Frederic Nallet, Thibaut Divoux, Annie Colin, Seyed Aboutalebi, Gordon Wallace, Cecile Zakri
Graphene oxide (GO), the main precursor of graphene-based materials made by solution processing, is known to be very stiff. Indeed, it has a Young's modulus comparable to steel, on the order of 300 GPa. Despite its very high stiffness, we show here that GO is superflexible. We quantitatively measure the GO bending rigidity by characterizing the flattening of thermal undulations in response to shear forces in solution. Characterizations are performed by the combination of synchrotron X-ray diffraction at small angles and in situ rheology (rheo-SAXS) experiments using the high X-ray flux of a synchrotron source. The bending modulus is found to be 1 kT, which is about two orders of magnitude lower than the bending rigidity of neat graphene. This superflexibility compares with the fluidity of self-assembled liquid bilayers. This behavior is discussed by considering the mechanisms at play in bending and stretching deformations of atomic monolayers. The superflexibility of GO is a unique feature to develop bendable electronics after reduction, films, coatings, and fibers. This unique combination of properties of GO allows for flexibility in processing and fabrication coupled with a robustness in the fabricated structure.

History

Journal

National Academy of Sciences Proceedings

Volume

113

Issue

40

Start page

11088

End page

11093

Total pages

6

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Place published

United States

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006074936

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-07-05

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