Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




CARBON WORLDS
Graphene's behavior depends on where it sits
by David L. Chandler for MIT News
Boston MA (SPX) Aug 15, 2012


Illustration only.

When you look at a gift-wrapped present, the basic properties of the wrapping paper - say, its colors and texture - are not generally changed by the nature of the gift inside. But surprising new experiments conducted at MIT show that a one-atom-thick material called graphene, a form of pure carbon whose atoms are joined in a chicken-wire-like lattice, behaves quite differently depending on the nature of material it's wrapped around.

When sheets of graphene are placed on substrates made of different materials, fundamental properties - such as how the graphene conducts electricity and how it interacts chemically with other materials - can be drastically different, depending on the nature of the underlying material.

"We were quite surprised" to discover this altered behavior, says Michael Strano, the Charles and Hilda Roddey Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT, who is the senior author of a paper published this week in the journal Nature Chemistry. "We expected it to behave like graphite" - a well-known form of carbon, used to make the lead in pencils, whose structure is essentially multiple layers of graphene piled on top of each other.

But its behavior turned out to be quite different. "Graphene is very strange," Strano says. Because of its extreme thinness, in practice graphene is almost always placed on top of some other material for support. When that material underneath is silicon dioxide, a standard material used in electronics, the graphene can readily become "functionalized" when exposed to certain chemicals. But when graphene sits on boron nitride, it hardly reacts at all to the same chemicals.

"It's very counterintuitive," Strano says. "You can turn off and turn on graphene's ability to form chemical bonds, based on what's underneath."

The reason, it turns out, is that the material is so thin that the way it reacts is strongly affected by the electrical fields of atoms in the material beneath it. This means that it is possible to create devices with a micropatterned substrate - made up of some silicon dioxide regions and some coated with boron nitride - covered with a layer of graphene whose chemical behavior will then vary according to the hidden patterning. This could enable, for example, the production of microarrays of sensors to detect trace biological or chemical materials.

Qing Hua Wang, an MIT postdoc who is the lead author of the paper, says, "You could get different molecules of a delicate biological marker to interact [with these regions on the graphene surface] without disrupting the biomolecules themselves." Most current fabrication techniques for such patterned surfaces involve heat and reactive solvents that can destroy these sensitive biological molecules.

Ultimately, graphene could even become a protective coating for many materials, Strano says. For example, the one-atom-thick material, when bonded to copper, completely eliminates that metal's tendency to oxidize (which produces the characteristic blue-green surface of copper roofs). "It can completely turn off the corrosion," he says, "almost like magic ... with just the whisper of a coating."

To explain why graphene behaves the way it does, "we came up with a new electron-transfer theory" that accounts for the way it is affected by the underlying material, Strano says. "A lot of chemists had missed this," and as a result had been confused by seemingly unpredictable changes in how graphene reacts in different situations. This new understanding can also be used to predict the material's behavior on other substrates, he says.

James Tour, a professor of chemistry and of computer science at Rice University who was not involved in this research, says, "This is the first systematic study of the substrate's effect on graphene's chemical reactivity. This is a very carefully conducted study with convincing results. I predict that it will become a frequently cited publication."

Wang adds that "it's a pretty general result" that can be used to predict the chemical behavior of many different configurations. "We think other groups can take this idea and really develop different things with it," she says. Tour agrees, saying, "The graphene-sensing community will be inspired by this work to explore many more substrates in an effort to optimize graphene reactivity."

As for the MIT team, she says, "the next step is, we're digging into the details of how bilayer graphene reacts. It seems to behave differently" than the single-layer material.

.


Related Links
MIT
Carbon Worlds - where graphite, diamond, amorphous, fullerenes meet






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CARBON WORLDS
Carbon Eaters on the Black Sea
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Aug 07, 2012
This brilliant cyan pattern scattered across the surface of the Black Sea is a bloom of microscopic phytoplankton. The multitude of single-celled algae in this image are most likely coccolithophores, one of Earth's champions of carbon pumping. Coccolithophores constantly remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and slowly send it down to the seafloor, an action that helps to stabilize the ... read more


CARBON WORLDS
Nano, photonic research gets boost from new 3-D visualization technology

Samsung expands lead in smartphone market: Gartner

Samsung takes on iPad with Galaxy Note tablet

Megaupload boss plans music venture, hints at relaunch

CARBON WORLDS
Raytheon unveils cross domain strategy to securely access information via mobile devices

NATO Special Forces Taps Mutualink for Global Cross Coalition Communications

Northrop Grumman Demonstrates Integrated Receiver Circuit Under DARPA Program

Boeing Receives 10th WGS Satellite Order from USAF

CARBON WORLDS
Pre launch verifications are underway for next Soyuz mission

GSAT-10 "spreads its wings" in preparation for Arianespace's next Ariane 5 launch

The Spaceport moves into action for Arianespace's next Soyuz mission to orbit two Galileo satellites

Sea Launch Prepares for the Launch of Intelsat 21

CARBON WORLDS
Next Galileo satellite reaches French Guiana launch site

Raytheon completes GPS OCX iteration 1.4 Critical Design Review

Mission accomplished, GIOVE-B heads into deserved retirement

Boeing Ships 3rd GPS IIF Satellite to Cape Canaveral for Launch

CARBON WORLDS
Nextant debuts business jet in Brazil

Kenya searches for Uganda chopper crash victims

Bahrain's Gulf Air to resume flights to Iraq, Iran

Oman Takes Flight

CARBON WORLDS
NASA Goddard Team to Demonstrate Miniaturized Spectrometer-on-a-Chip

Dutch firm ASML clinches 1.1 bn euro deal with Taiwan's TSMC

How to avoid traps in plastic electronics

HP claims win in legal battle with Oracle

CARBON WORLDS
Sparse microwave imaging: A new concept in microwave imaging technology

NASA Finalizes Contracts for NOAA's JPSS-1 Mission

MSG-3, Europe's latest weather satellite, delivers first image

Test flight over Peru ruins could revolutionize archaeological mapping

CARBON WORLDS
Vietnam, US begin historic Agent Orange cleanup

Worldwide increase of air pollution

Philippine gold mine suspended over spill

Top researcher snubs French honour over 'industrial crimes'




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement