Noncovalent Functionalization of Graphene and Graphene Oxide for Energy Materials, Biosensing, Catalytic, and Biomedical Applications
Author(s) -
Vasilios Georgakilas,
Jitendra N. Tiwari,
K. Christian Kemp,
Jason A. Perman,
Athanasios B. Bourlinos,
Kwang S. Kim,
Radek Zbořil
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chemical reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 20.528
H-Index - 700
eISSN - 1520-6890
pISSN - 0009-2665
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00620
Subject(s) - graphene , surface modification , nanotechnology , oxide , carbon nanotube , chemistry , biosensor , materials science , organic chemistry
This Review focuses on noncovalent functionalization of graphene and graphene oxide with various species involving biomolecules, polymers, drugs, metals and metal oxide-based nanoparticles, quantum dots, magnetic nanostructures, other carbon allotropes (fullerenes, nanodiamonds, and carbon nanotubes), and graphene analogues (MoS2, WS2). A brief description of π-π interactions, van der Waals forces, ionic interactions, and hydrogen bonding allowing noncovalent modification of graphene and graphene oxide is first given. The main part of this Review is devoted to tailored functionalization for applications in drug delivery, energy materials, solar cells, water splitting, biosensing, bioimaging, environmental, catalytic, photocatalytic, and biomedical technologies. A significant part of this Review explores the possibilities of graphene/graphene oxide-based 3D superstructures and their use in lithium-ion batteries. This Review ends with a look at challenges and future prospects of noncovalently modified graphene and graphene oxide.
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