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For many years, researchers did not understand why graphene oxide remained stable in water. Now a research team finds that it's due to a common contaminant introduced during filtration.
A Northwestern University-led team recently found the answer to a mysterious question that has puzzled the materials science community for years —and it came in the form of some surprisingly basic chemistry.
Like many scientists, Jiaxing Huang did not understand why graphene oxide (GO) films were highly stable in water. When submerged, the individual GO sheets become negatively charged and repel each other, which should cause membrane to disintegrate. But earlier papers noted that instead of disintegrating, the films stabilized.
Image from graphene-info.com
"It doesn't make any sense," said Huang, associate professor of materials science and engineering at the McCormick School of Engineering. "Many scientists have been very puzzled by this."
Graphene oxide, a product of graphite oxidation, is often used to make graphene, a single-atom-layer thick sheet of carbon that is remarkably strong, lightweight, and has high potential in electronics and energy storage. Within the past three years, however, more scientists have become interested in GO itself, partially because of its potential for molecular separation applications.
Graphene oxide film
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After studying the material for many years, Huang realized that the secret of GO's mysterious insolubility was the unintentional introduction of a common contaminant. To make a GO film, many scientists pass the acidic dispersion of individual sheets through porous anodized aluminum oxide filter discs, which are popularly used for preparing membranes of many nanomaterials. Huang's team found that during filtration, the aluminum filter discs corrode in acidic water to release a significant number of aluminum ions, Al3+. The positively charged ion bonds with the negatively charged GO sheets to stabilize the resulting membranes.
Image from physics-chemistry-class.com
"We have solved the puzzle using essentially freshman-level inorganic chemistry," Huang said. "Now we know that graphene oxide films are indeed soluble in water. It's just a matter of sample purity."
Other multivalent metal ions, such as manganese, which is a byproduct from the synthesis of GO, can also crosslink the sheets.
Huang's research is described in "On the origin of stability of graphene-oxide membranes in water," published in Nature Chemistry on January 5. Other authors of the paper include graduate student Che-Ning Yeh, postdoc Kalyan Raidongia, former visiting graduate student Jiaojing Shao, and Shao's former adviser Quan-Hong Yang from Tianjin University in China. The National Science Foundation and Office of Naval Research funded different parts described in the paper.
Huang's finding also indicated that GO films are not as strong as researchers once thought. The aluminum ions make the film much stiffer. Without the ions, GO is three to four times weaker.
"This is a wake-up call for anyone using aluminum oxide filter discs," he said. "People have used it for sample preparation in many areas of materials science and biology. Now we know it's not as clean as we think."
Adapted from sciencedaily.com ©2015
Jiaxing Huang
Image from McCormick School of Engineering
1. Which advantage of graphene is NOT mentioned in the text?
2. Aluminium filter disks are ............... used in materials sciences and biology.
1. The mystery of graphene oxide films was solved using very complex chemistry.
2. Researchers demonstrated that the presence of impurities made graphene oxide stable in water.
3. Previous research showed that putting graphene oxide sheets in water did not give the expected results
4. Graphene is a very thick material with great properties.
5. Professor Huang only became interested in graphene oxide recently.
6. He proved that someone deliberately put the contaminant in the solution.
7. Other specific atoms can go through the same process.
8. The researchers also found the presence of the contaminant modified graphene oxide's rigidity.
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