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Wet-Chemical Assembly of 2D Nanomaterials into Lightweight, Microtube-Shaped, and Macroscopic 3D Networks
Author(s) -
Florian Rasch,
Fabian Schütt,
Lena M. Saure,
Sören Kaps,
Julian Strobel,
Oleksandr Polonskyi,
Ali Shaygan Nia,
Martin R. Lohe,
Yogendra Kumar Mishra,
Franz Faupel,
Lorenz Kienle,
Xinliang Feng,
Rainer Adelung
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.9b16565
Subject(s) - materials science , graphene , nanomaterials , fabrication , supercapacitor , porosity , nanotechnology , oxide , percolation (cognitive psychology) , carbon nanotube , nanostructure , percolation threshold , carbon fibers , composite material , composite number , capacitance , electrical resistivity and conductivity , electrode , medicine , chemistry , alternative medicine , engineering , pathology , neuroscience , biology , electrical engineering , metallurgy
Despite tremendous efforts toward fabrication of three-dimensional macrostructures of two-dimensional (2D) materials, the existing approaches still lack sufficient control over microscopic (morphology, porosity, pore size) and macroscopic (shape, size) properties of the resulting structures. In this work, a facile fabrication method for the wet-chemical assembly of carbon 2D nanomaterials into macroscopic networks of interconnected, hollow microtubes is introduced. As demonstrated for electrochemically exfoliated graphene, graphene oxide, and reduced graphene oxide, the approach allows for the preparation of highly porous (> 99.9%) and lightweight (<2 mg cm -3 ) aeromaterials with tailored porosity and pore size as well as tailorable shape and size. The unique tubelike morphology with high aspect ratio enables ultralow-percolation-threshold graphene composites (0.03 S m -1 , 0.05 vol%) which even outperform most of the carbon nanotube-based composites, as well as highly conductive aeronetworks (8 S m -1 , 4 mg cm -3 ). On top of that, long-term compression cycling of the aeronetworks demonstrates remarkable mechanical stability over 10 000 cycles, even though no chemical cross-linking is employed. The developed strategy could pave the way for fabrication of various macrostructures of 2D nanomaterials with defined shape, size, as well as micro- and nanostructure, crucial for numerous applications such as batteries, supercapacitors, and filters.

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