4.8 Article

Chemistry and Structure of Graphene Oxide via Direct Imaging

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages 7515-7522

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b02391

Keywords

graphene oxide; TEM; AC-TEM; surface contaminants

Funding

  1. Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation at MIT
  2. National Science Foundation [ECS-0335765]
  3. Royal Society

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Graphene oxide (GO) and reduced GO (rGO) are the only variants of graphene that can be manufactured at the kilogram scale, and yet the widely accepted model for their structure has largely relied on indirect evidence. Notably, existing high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) studies of graphene oxide report long-range order of sp(2) lattice with isolated defect clusters. Here, we present HRTEM evidence of a different structural form of GO, where nanocrystalline regions of sp(2) lattice are surrounded by regions of disorder. The presence of contaminants that adsorb to the surface of the material at room temperature normally prevents direct observation of the intrinsic atomic structure of this defective GO. To overcome this, we use an in situ heating holder within an aberration-corrected TEM (AC-TEM) to study the atomic structure of this nanocrystalline graphene oxide from room temperature to 700 degrees C. As the temperature increases to above 500 degrees C, the adsorbates detach from the GO and the underlying atomic structure is imaged to be small 2-4 nm crystalline domains within a polycrystalline GO film. By combining spectroscopic evidence with the AC-TEM data, we support the dynamic interpretation of the structural evolution of graphene oxide.

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