Issue 12, 2019

Mass production of low-boiling point solvent- and water-soluble graphene by simple salt-assisted ball milling

Abstract

Developing a mass production method for graphene is essential for practical usage of this remarkable material. Direct exfoliation of graphite in a liquid is a promising approach for production of high quality graphene. However, this technique has three huge obstacles to be solved; limitation of solvent, low yield and low quality (i.e., multilayer graphene with a small size). Here, we found that soluble graphite produced by mechanochemical reaction with salts overcomes the above three drawbacks. Soluble graphite was exfoliated into monolayer graphene with more than 10% yield in five minutes of sonication. The modified graphite was easily exfoliated in a low-boiling point solvent such as acetone, alcohol and water without the aid of a surfactant. Molecular simulation revealed that the salt is adsorbed to the active carbon at the graphite edge. In the case of weak acid salts, the original bonding nature between the alkali ion and the base molecule is retained after the reaction. Thus, alkali metals are easily dissociated in a polar solvent, leading to negative charge of graphene, enabling the exfoliation of graphite in low boiling point solvents. The approach proposed here opens up a new door to practical usage of the attractive 2D material.

Graphical abstract: Mass production of low-boiling point solvent- and water-soluble graphene by simple salt-assisted ball milling

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Jul 2019
Accepted
29 Oct 2019
First published
21 Nov 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Adv., 2019,1, 4955-4964

Mass production of low-boiling point solvent- and water-soluble graphene by simple salt-assisted ball milling

Y. Arao, R. Kuwahara, K. Ohno, J. Tanks, K. Aida, M. Kubouchi and S. Takeda, Nanoscale Adv., 2019, 1, 4955 DOI: 10.1039/C9NA00463G

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