Author
Listed:
- Yanan Chen
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Garth C. Egan
(University of Maryland College Park
University of Maryland College Park
Present address: Materials Science Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550, USA)
- Jiayu Wan
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Shuze Zhu
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Rohit Jiji Jacob
(University of Maryland College Park
University of Maryland College Park)
- Wenbo Zhou
(University of Maryland College Park
University of Maryland College Park)
- Jiaqi Dai
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Yanbin Wang
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Valencia A. Danner
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Yonggang Yao
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Kun Fu
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Yibo Wang
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Wenzhong Bao
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Teng Li
(University of Maryland College Park)
- Michael R. Zachariah
(University of Maryland College Park
University of Maryland College Park)
- Liangbing Hu
(University of Maryland College Park)
Abstract
Nanoparticles hosted in conductive matrices are ubiquitous in electrochemical energy storage, catalysis and energetic devices. However, agglomeration and surface oxidation remain as two major challenges towards their ultimate utility, especially for highly reactive materials. Here we report uniformly distributed nanoparticles with diameters around 10 nm can be self-assembled within a reduced graphene oxide matrix in 10 ms. Microsized particles in reduced graphene oxide are Joule heated to high temperature (∼1,700 K) and rapidly quenched to preserve the resultant nano-architecture. A possible formation mechanism is that microsized particles melt under high temperature, are separated by defects in reduced graphene oxide and self-assemble into nanoparticles on cooling. The ultra-fast manufacturing approach can be applied to a wide range of materials, including aluminium, silicon, tin and so on. One unique application of this technique is the stabilization of aluminium nanoparticles in reduced graphene oxide film, which we demonstrate to have excellent performance as a switchable energetic material.
Suggested Citation
Yanan Chen & Garth C. Egan & Jiayu Wan & Shuze Zhu & Rohit Jiji Jacob & Wenbo Zhou & Jiaqi Dai & Yanbin Wang & Valencia A. Danner & Yonggang Yao & Kun Fu & Yibo Wang & Wenzhong Bao & Teng Li & Michael, 2016.
"Ultra-fast self-assembly and stabilization of reactive nanoparticles in reduced graphene oxide films,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 7(1), pages 1-9, November.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:7:y:2016:i:1:d:10.1038_ncomms12332
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12332
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