
Growing three-dimensional biomorphic graphene powders using naturally abundant diatomite templates towards high solution processability
Author(s) -
Ke Chen,
Cong Li,
Lei Shi,
Teng Gao,
Xiuju Song,
Alicja Bachmatiuk,
Zhiyu Zou,
Bing Deng,
Qingqing Ji,
Donglin Ma,
Hailin Peng,
Zuliang Du,
Mark H. Rümmeli,
Yanfeng Zhang,
Zhongfan Liu
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
nature communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.559
H-Index - 365
ISSN - 2041-1723
DOI - 10.1038/ncomms13440
Subject(s) - graphene , materials science , nanotechnology , chemical vapor deposition , template , stacking , conductivity , chemistry , physics , nuclear magnetic resonance
Mass production of high-quality graphene with low cost is the footstone for its widespread practical applications. We present herein a self-limited growth approach for producing graphene powders by a small-methane-flow chemical vapour deposition process on naturally abundant and industrially widely used diatomite (biosilica) substrates. Distinct from the chemically exfoliated graphene, thus-produced biomorphic graphene is highly crystallized with atomic layer-thickness controllability, structural designability and less noncarbon impurities. In particular, the individual graphene microarchitectures preserve a three-dimensional naturally curved surface morphology of original diatom frustules, effectively overcoming the interlayer stacking and hence giving excellent dispersion performance in fabricating solution-processible electrodes. The graphene films derived from as-made graphene powders, compatible with either rod-coating, or inkjet and roll-to-roll printing techniques, exhibit much higher electrical conductivity (∼110,700 S m −1 at 80% transmittance) than previously reported solution-based counterparts. This work thus puts forward a practical route for low-cost mass production of various powdery two-dimensional materials.