Back to Search Start Over

Silicon as a ubiquitous contaminant in graphene derivatives with significant impact on device performance

Authors :
Jalili, Rouhollah
Esrafilzadeh, Dorna
Aboutalebi, Seyed Hamed
Sabri, Ylias M
Kandjani, Ahmad E
Bhargava, Suresh K
Della Gaspera, Enrico
Gengenbach, Thomas R
Walker, Ashley
Chao, Yunfeng
Wang, Caiyun
Alimadadi, Hossein
Mitchell, David R. G
Officer, David L
MacFarlane, Douglas R
Wallace, Gordon G
Jalili, Rouhollah
Esrafilzadeh, Dorna
Aboutalebi, Seyed Hamed
Sabri, Ylias M
Kandjani, Ahmad E
Bhargava, Suresh K
Della Gaspera, Enrico
Gengenbach, Thomas R
Walker, Ashley
Chao, Yunfeng
Wang, Caiyun
Alimadadi, Hossein
Mitchell, David R. G
Officer, David L
MacFarlane, Douglas R
Wallace, Gordon G
Source :
Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Silicon-based impurities are ubiquitous in natural graphite. However, their role as a contaminant in exfoliated graphene and their influence on devices have been overlooked. Herein atomic resolution microscopy is used to highlight the existence of silicon-based contamination on various solution-processed graphene. We found these impurities are extremely persistent and thus utilising high purity graphite as a precursor is the only route to produce silicon-free graphene. These impurities are found to hamper the effective utilisation of graphene in whereby surface area is of paramount importance. When non-contaminated graphene is used to fabricate supercapacitor microelectrodes, a capacitance value closest to the predicted theoretical capacitance for graphene is obtained. We also demonstrate a versatile humidity sensor made from pure graphene oxide which achieves the highest sensitivity and the lowest limit of detection ever reported. Our findings constitute a vital milestone to achieve commercially viable and high performance graphene-based devices.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1086370533
Document Type :
Electronic Resource