Functionalization of Graphene: Covalent and Non-Covalent Approaches, Derivatives and Applications
Functionalization of Graphene: Covalent and Non-Covalent Approaches, Derivatives and Applications
Functionalization of Graphene: Covalent and Non-Covalent Approaches, Derivatives and Applications
pubs.acs.org/CR
Institute of Materials Science, NCSR Demokritos, Ag. Paraskevi Attikis, 15310 Athens, Greece
Regional Centre of Advanced Technologies and Materials, Department of Physical Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Palacky University
Olomouc, 17. listopadu 12, 771 46 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Center for Superfunctional Materials, Department of Chemistry, Pohang University of Science and Technology, San 31, Hyojadong,
Namgu, Pohang 790-784, Korea
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, v.v.i., Flemingovo nam. 2, 166 10
Prague 6, Czech Republic
CONTENTS
1. Introduction
2. Functionalization by Covalent Bonding
2.1. Covalent Attachment of Organic Functionalities to Pristine Graphene
2.1.1. Addition of Free Radicals to sp2 Carbon
Atoms of Graphene
2.1.2. Addition of Dienophiles to Carbon
Carbon Bonds
2.2. Covalent Attachment of Functionalities to
Graphene Oxides
2.2.1. Addition of Chromophores
2.2.2. Covalent Linkage to Polymers
2.2.3. Addition of Other Organic Molecules
2.2.4. Starting from Partially Reduced Graphene Oxide
2.3. Covalent Attachments of Hydrogen and
Halogens toward Graphene Derivatives
2.3.1. Graphane
2.3.2. Fluorographene (Graphene Fluoride)
3. Noncovalent Functionalization of Graphenes
3.1. GrapheneLigand Noncovalent Interactions:
Theory
3.1.1. Nonpolar Gas Interaction
3.1.2. H Interaction
3.1.3. Interaction
3.1.4. Cation Interaction
3.1.5. cation Interaction
3.1.6. Anion Interaction
3.1.7. GrapheneLigand Noncovalent Interaction
3.2. GrapheneLigand Noncovalent Interactions:
Experiment
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1. INTRODUCTION
Graphene, the two-dimensional sp2-hybridized carbon, is
currently, without any doubt, the most intensively studied
material. This single-atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms arrayed in
a honeycomb pattern is the worlds thinnest, strongest, and
stiest material, as well as being an excellent conductor of both
heat and electricity. It is no wonder that this two-dimensional
material is considered, from the application viewpoint, to be even
more promising than other nanostructured carbon allotropes,
that is, 1-dimensional nanotubes and 0-dimensional fullerenes.
Since the rst experimental evidence of the electronic
properties of graphene in 2004,1 a major focus of experimental
research has been concentrated on the development of new
synthetic routes enabling an eective production of well-dened
sheets.218 The commonly applied methods include the
micromechanical1 or chemical exfoliation of graphite,13 chemical
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vapor deposition (CVD) growth,612 and chemical, electrochemical, thermal, or photocatalytic reduction of graphene oxide
(GO; in this review, GO represents graphene oxide, whereas
graphite oxide is written in full) and uorographene.1518 The
specic approaches involve, for example, reduction of other
graphene derivatives like graphene uoride toward single
graphene nanoplatelets.
The developed methods of graphene preparation allowed
observation of unique properties including a half-integer
quantum Hall eect for both electrons and holes even at room
temperature,1922 extraordinarily high carrier mobility, and
single-molecule detection.23 Graphene also exhibits other
superior characteristics of electronic, mechanical, optical, and
transport nature. These include ambipolar eld eect,22
superlative mechanical strength,24 large specic surface area,25
high transparency,9,26 and high thermal conductivity.27
Thanks to these extraordinary and superior properties,
graphene has already revealed a great number of potential
applications with possible uses in touch screens, capacitors,
spintronic devices, fuel cells, batteries, sensors, transparent
conductive lms, high-frequency circuits, toxic material removal,
and exible electronics.9,2832 Once biofunctionalized with
biomolecules (proteins, peptides, etc.), the graphene-based
nanostructures may open a gateway to new elds in
biotechnology.33 Recently, graphene has been found to be a
promising component in the development of uorescence
resonance energy transfer (FRET) biosensors due to its
quenching capability toward various organic dyes and quantum
dots,3436 as well as fast DNA sequencing.37
Despite the great application potential, it is worth mentioning
that graphene itself possesses zero band gap as well as inertness
to reaction, which weakens the competitive strength of graphene
in the eld of semiconductors and sensors. This is one of the
reasons for the huge increase in the number of research projects
aimed at functionalization of graphene including reactions of
graphene (and its derivatives) with organic and inorganic
molecules, chemical modication of the large graphene surface,
and the general description of various covalent and noncovalent
interactions with graphene.3845 Band gap opening of graphene
by doping, intercalation, and striping would be useful for
functional nanoelectronic devices.46,47
This comprehensive review represents the rst complex work
covering all modes and methods of graphene functionalization
including their classication. The complementary discussion of
both experimental and theoretical aspects of graphene
functionalization and interaction is presented. The functionalization modes related to chemistry of graphene derivatives (GO,
graphane, uorographene) represent a signicant part of the
review, which thus considerably exceeds the chemistry of pristine
graphene.
As a result we comprehensively discuss both covalent
functionalization based on binding of organic functionalities
like free radicals and dienophiles on pristine graphene (section
2.1) and attachment through the chemistry of oxygen groups of
GO, that is, methods starting from GO (section 2.2). The
covalent attachment of hydrogen and halogens and, generally,
the chemistry of graphane and uorographene is described in
section 2.3. Section 3 reports noncovalent functionalization and
interactions, which do not disrupt the extended -conjugation on
the graphene surface, unlike covalent functionalization. A
signicant part of this section is devoted to the theory of
grapheneligand noncovalent interactions, while various interaction modes ( interactions) are analyzed from both theoretical
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Figure 2. Time dependence of current I: (left) Scheme of the experiment shows the device consisted of two parallel resistances derived from the
graphene and the solution, and (right) N1s and C1s XPS spectra of GNRs before and after the functionalization (f-GNRs). Reprinted with permission
from ref 64. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
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Figure 3. The attachment of aryl groups on graphene nanoplatelets and the formation of polystyrene chains grafted on graphene nanoplatelets.
Reprinted with permission from ref 71. Copyright 2009 Royal Society of Chemistry.
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Figure 5. (left) Schematic representation of the 1,3 dipolar cycloaddition of azomethine ylide on graphene. (top, right) Dispersion of functionalized
graphene nanoplatelets in ethanol. (bottom, right) Raman spectra of (a) pristine graphene and (b) pyrrolidine functionalized graphene. Reprinted with
permission from ref 79. Copyright 2010 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 6. (top) Characteristic TEM and (bottom) AFM images of the graphene-f-OH isolated from an ethanol dispersion. Reprinted with permission
from ref 15. Copyright 2009 Nature Publishing Group.
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Figure 9. (a) The reaction of alkyl nitrenes with graphene sheets. (b)
TEM images of the Au decorated graphene nanoplatelets after organic
modication with undecanoic acid groups. (c) Raman spectra of
graphene sheet before (1) and after the nitrene addition of
azidoundecanoic acid in 1:1 (2) and 10:1 (3) ratios. Reprinted with
permission from ref 85. Copyright 2011 Royal Society of Chemistry.
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Figure 11. (left) Structure of GO and (right) its FTIR spectrum. Left panel reprinted with permission from ref 101. Copyright 2009 Wiley. Right panel
reprinted with permission from ref 102; Copyright 2011 Indian Academy of Sciences.
Figure 12. (top) Structure of oligothiophene functionalized GO. (bottom, left) Fluorescence spectra of oligothiopheneGO compared with that of
pure oligothiophene. (bottom, right) FTIR spectra of GO, oligothiophene (6Thiop), and the functionalized GO (6Thiop-NH-SPFGraphene).
Reprinted with permission from ref 103. Copyright 2009 Elsevier.
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Figure 13. The reaction between GO and CH2OH-terminated P3HT chains through an esterication reaction. Reprinted with permission from ref 104.
Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Figure 14. (a) Schematic and (b) energy level diagram of a ITO/PEDOT:PSS/GOP3HT/C60/Al photovoltaic device. Reprinted with permission
from ref 104. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
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Figure 21. Representation of the formation of the C60GO composite. Reprinted with permission from ref 132. Copyright 2008 Elsevier.
Figure 22. Illustration of the preparation of imidazolium-modied GO. Reprinted with permission from ref 135. Copyright 2009 Royal Society of
Chemistry.
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Figure 23. Preparation of imidazolium-modied GO hybrid materials and anion-exchange reactions: (i) (COCl)2, 80 C, 18 h; (ii) 1-(3aminopropyl)imidazole, 100 C, 18 h; (iii) 1-bromobutane, 90 C, 18 h; (iv) H2O, NaPF6 or protoporphyrin IX disodium salt, 25 C, 18 h. Reprinted
with permission from ref 136. Copyright 2010 Elsevier.
Figure 24. Preparation of butylamine-functionalized RGO nanoplatelets. Reprinted with permission from ref 138. Copyright 2009 American Chemical
Society.
not been achieved yet. There are always epoxy and hydroxyl
functional groups on the basal plane of the RGO.148 Density
functional theory (DFT) investigations of the structure of
graphene after deoxygenation conrm that it is impossible to
completely remove the oxygen-containing functional groups
from the graphene surface using chemical or thermal reduction
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Figure 26. Stressstrain plots of neat APTS monolith (solid) and Si-fGO reinforced PTS monolith (dotted). Inset: photographs of monolith
disks for the compressive tests. From left to right: Si-f-GO reinforced
PTS monolith and neat APTS monolith. Reprinted with permission
from ref 143. Copyright 2009 Royal Society of Chemistry.
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Figure 27. (a) Graphical representation of the modied graphene and P3HT, (b) schematic representation of the bulk heterojunction photovoltaic cells,
and (c) an AFM image of the modied graphene. Reprinted with permission from ref 146. Copyright 2009 Wiley.
Figure 28. Two dierent grafting methods from the same organic molecule. Reprinted with permission from ref 152. Copyright 2010 American
Chemical Society.
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Figure 29. (a) Thermogravimetric curves and (b) corresponding derivative curves of the starting materials and the derivatives. Photograph showing the
dispersion of graphene, F-graphene/MA-POA2000 and D-graphene/MA-POA2000 in THF (from right to left). Reprinted with permission from ref
152. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Figure 30. Schematic representation of covalent attachment of PS/PAM copolymer to RGO. Reprinted with permission from ref 153. Copyright 2009
Wiley.
Figure 31. Graphene layer (in green) that is attacked by cold plasma
hydrogen atoms to produce graphane. Reprinted with permission from
ref 159. Copyright 2009 American Association for the Advancement of
Science.
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Figure 33. (a) First Brillouin zone and (b) unit cell and bases of graphane in the chair conformation. Blue and white balls represent carbon and hydrogen
atoms, respectively. (c) Band structure in local-density approximation (LDA, full line) and GW approximation (circles) and projected density of states of
graphane. The zero level indicates the vacuum level position. Reprinted with permission from ref 162. Copyright 2010 American Physical Society.
2.3.2. Fluorographene (Graphene Fluoride). Fluorographene (also known as graphene uoride) was synthesized by
uorination of graphene using XeF2 at room temperature (30
C).169 Fluorination of CVD grown graphene on a copper
support leads to single side uorination with preferred C4F
stoichiometry, while uorination of graphene on a silicon-oninsulator support leads to uorination on both sides of the
surface with a dominant C1F1 stoichiometry. Due to the presence
of defects in the CVD graphene structure (vacancies, free edges,
and grain boundaries), a small fraction of CF2 (12%) and CF3
(2%) besides the majority CF (86%) bonds were also identied
in uorinated samples using XPS.169 Single side uorination
leads to the appearance of a D peak at 1350 cm1 and broadening
of the G (1580 cm1) and D peaks (1620 cm1), as well as a
decrease in the 2D Raman peaks, while uorination on both sides
of the surface cancels the Raman signal (Figure 36). Graphene
uoride was also prepared from pristine graphite uoride by
mechanical exfoliation,170,171 that is, by an analogous approach to
that for the preparation of graphene. The chemical exfoliation of
graphite uoride, prepared by uorination of highly ordered
pyrolitic graphite at 600 C and 1 atm of uorine, provides
graphene uoride with stoichiometry C0.7F1.172 However, hightemperature synthesis leads to highly defective graphene
uoride.169 Chemical etching of graphite uoride by sulfolane
(at 80 C) was also successful in producing a colloidal solution of
graphene uoride.158
Fluorination of graphene dramatically changes its structure
and electronic and optical properties (Figure 36). The graphene
sp2 carbon atoms rehybridize to sp3 carbons in uorographene,
and consequently the uorographene structure is buckled; CC
and CF bonds are 1.571.59 and 1.411.45 long,
respectively. The zero band gap of pristine graphene opens, and
uorographene behaves like an insulator with a resistivity higher
than 1012 .171 An anisotropic negative magnetoresistance and
unusual staircaselike magnetic-eld dependence at low temperature of diluted uorographene has been reported recently.173 A
high third-order nonlinear optical response of uorographene
dispersion has been recently observed.174 Photoluminescence
measurements of a uorographene dispersion in acetone identify
an emission peak at 3.8 eV (Figure 37), which has been assigned
to band-to-band recombination of free electrons and holes.175
Theoretical calculations of the uorographene band gap by GGA
DFT method provides values around 3.1 eV,158,176,177 not very
dierent from the value for graphite uoride.178,179 The
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Figure 36. One side uorination (one side uorinated graphene C4F, panel b) changes the optical properties of graphene (panel a). Raman signal of
stoichiometric uorographene (CF, panel c) disappears. The spectra of graphene and uorographene are oset for clarity. Reprinted with permission
from ref 169. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
3. NONCOVALENT FUNCTIONALIZATION OF
GRAPHENES
Graphite is a natural and inexpensive source for large scale
production of graphene sheets. However, the stacking
between graphene sheets results in the formation of multilayers.
Pristine graphene sheets are hydrophobic in nature, so they
cannot be dissolved in polar solvents. This makes functionalization of graphene sheets important for their future applications.
To make graphene soluble in common solvents, and thereby
avoid stacking, noncovalent functionalization with dierent
organic compounds is essential. Noncovalent functionalization
by -interactions (as in the case of carbon nanotubes) is an
attractive synthetic method, because it oers the possibility of
attaching functional groups to graphene without disturbing the
electronic network.187,188
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magnitude of interactions between the molecule and graphene.245 Nucleobases receive special attention due to a
biological importance of those molecules. Adsorption of adenine
on graphite was studied by using DFT taking into account van
der Waals interactions.246 A similar study compared the binding
energies of nucleobases by using LDA and MP2.247 Umadevi and
Sastry248 employed newly developed density functionals to deal
with similar systems, while Antony and Grimme249 reported
DFT-D/GGA, B2PLYP-D, and SCS-MP2 results for these
systems. Berland et al.250 used the vdW-DF method to accurately
calculate the binding energy curve for an adenine molecule
approaching graphene surface. The interaction of several amino
acids with the graphene surface has been studied using GGA and
MP2 methods.251 The planar nature of graphene can be
exploited to tune its electric properties. The benzenemetal
(M = Ni, K, Pd, Al, Ag, Cu, Au, and Pt) and graphenemetal
interface has been studied.244,252255 It has been shown that a
SiC substrate is able to induce a band gap in graphene.256,257
Organic molecules can also be used to achieve electronic tuning
of graphene;258 in this sense the interactions of diverse molecules
with graphene and carbon nanotubes have been utilized in
designing devices and sensors that recognize molecular
characteristics.259263 The interaction of nucleobases with
graphene has been utilized to design a two-dimensional
conductance device toward fast DNA sequencing.37,264,265
3.2. GrapheneLigand Noncovalent Interactions:
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In subsequent work, Wang and Hersam38 reported the roomtemperature molecular resolution of a self-assembled perylene3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA) monolayer on
epitaxial graphene using STM. The PTCDA molecular structure
is shown in Figure 42a. PTCDA is a planar molecule based on a
perylene backbone with a conjugated -electron system and
carboxylic acid anhydride side groups. After gas-phase deposition
in ultrahigh vacuum (UHV), the resultant monolayer of PTCDA
on graphene is observed at room-temperature using STM
(Figure 42b). The molecule forms a well-ordered, self-assembled
monolayer with large domains that span hundreds of nanometers. At higher resolution, the herringbone pattern formed by the
molecules in the PTCDA monolayer is visible (Figure 42c). This
structure closely resembles the (102) plane of the PTCDA bulk
crystal structure. Molecular structure diagrams are drawn over
the STM image in Figure 42c to indicate the locations of
molecules in the monolayer, and the outline of one unit cell is
shown with the lattice vectors (a and b) specied. A larger
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Figure 44. Illustration of a procedure to design RGON hybrids and the RGON platform used as an electrochemical biosensor. Reprinted with
permission from ref 283. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
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Figure 45. HRTEM micrographs of (a) neat ILFG showing the crumpled sheet like texture (inset on right-hand side shows the thickness of the
nanosheet), (b) neat RGO with the inset showing a blown up view of a fold on the nanoplatelet, (c) the PEDOTRGO nanocomposite; the ellipses
encircle the streak like structures typical of RGO and are surrounded by the amorphous polymer, (d) PEDOTILFG nanocomposite, the elongated
shapes (as in the inset) are characteristic of ILFG, (e) coexisting crystalline and amorphous phases in PEDOTILFG (inset is a magnied view of a
quasi-ordered arrangement of lattice fringes), and (f) a relatively defect free crystallite of ILFG in PEDOTILFG (the inset shows the fringe separation
of 0.85 nm). Reprinted with permission from ref 287. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
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Figure 48. (A) (left) Photograph of a polymer PmPV/DCE solution with GNRs stably suspended in the solution and (right) schematic drawing of a
graphene nanoribbon with two units of a PmPV polymer chain adsorbed on top of the graphene via stacking. (BF) Chemically derived graphene
nanoribbons down to sub-10-nm width. Reprinted with permission from ref 59. Copyright 2008 American Association for the Advancement of Science.
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Figure 49. (a) Chemical structure of PEG-OPE. (b) The synthesis of PEG-OPERGO in H2O. Step 1, oxidation of graphite yields single-layer GO
nanoplatelets. Step 2, Chemical reduction of GO with hydrazine in the presence of PEG-OPE produces a stable aqueous suspension of PEG-OPE
RGO. (c) Photograph of (A) GO and (B) RGO in water and (C) PEG-OPERGO and (D) PEG-OPE in methanol. Reprinted with permission from ref
305. Copyright 2010 Wiley.
Figure 50. TEM images of chemically converted graphene nanoplatelets (a) in the presence of and (b) in the absence of ILP and (c) tapping mode AFM
image of the ILP-G processed from organic suspension and height proles across the ILP-G sheets indicating a thickness of 1.9 nm. Reprinted with
permission from ref 306. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
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Figure 51. (Left) Photograph of several dispersions of gold nanoparticles (1 mM) in THF with dierent concentrations of GOODA (octadecylamine)
and (right) the characteristic UVvis absorption spectra of the dispersions. Reprinted with permission from ref 318. Copyright 2008 American
Chemical Society.
Noble metals such as Pt, Au, Ag, Rh, Pd, and related alloys are
often used in the form of nanostructures in a variety of
applications ranging from catalytic systems to fuel cells, sensors,
supercapacitors, and storage batteries.311316 Considering its
reducibility, GO could be used to prepare graphenemetal
particle nanocomposites. As such dispersions of metal nanoparticles on graphene sheets potentially provide a new way to
develop catalytic, magnetic, and optoelectronic materials. Eorts
are being made to utilize graphene sheets as supports to disperse
semiconductor and Pt particles and use them in solar cells and
fuel cells.
Usually, the precursors for NPs are metal salts, which are
reduced in a solvent that contains dispersed GO, RGO, or
pristine graphene nanoplatelets. The last two are preferred when
the conductivity of the substrate is of high importance. In some
cases, the reducing agents or procedures are strong enough to
reduce GO simultaneously. The formed NPs are spread onto the
relatively huge surface area of graphitic nanoplatelets.
Graphene-stabilized gold nanoparticles (330 nm in diameter) have been synthesized using chemically modied graphene
nanoplatelets, which support the gold nanoparticles. In this
method, gold atoms were deposited onto few-layer graphene.
These gold atoms are then condensed upon annealing to form
nanoparticles.316 Recently, anity of gold nanoparticles to
graphene has been compared with that of palladium and silver
nanoparticles with the conclusion that palladium has the highest
anity to graphene. The theoretical calculations (at MP2 and
vdW-DF levels) suggested that the high anity of palladium to
graphene is caused by the partial covalent nature of binding
between Pd and graphene.317
The deposition of gold nanoparticles on GO nanoplatelets has
also been achieved by the direct reduction of AuCl4 by NaBH4 in
a GO THF suspension.318 The GO nanoplatelets used in the
synthesis were rst functionalized with octadecyl amine (GO
ODA) in order to be dispersible in the organic solvent. The
formation of the Au nanoparticles (NP) was conrmed using
UVvis absorption where the evolution of the characteristic
absorption band around 550 nm was observed (Figure 51). The
size and the dispersibility of the as formed Au NPs were
determined by the concentration of GOODA in the solution.
As presented in Figure 52, in the absence of GOODA, the Au
NPs formed large aggregates, and this caused precipitation. As
the concentration of GOODA was increased, the Au NPs were
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Figure 53. Schematic representation of the fabrication process of RGO-based memory devices using Au NPs. Reprinted with permission from ref 320.
Copyright 2010 Wiley.
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water system has also been used for the reduction of Au, Pt, and
Pd cations in the presence of GO. The as formed NPs are then
capable of catalytically reducing the GO surface in the presence
of ethylene glycol.326
4.2. Deposition of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles
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Figure 56. TEM images of RGO nanoplatelets decorated with (a) Pd, (b) Cu, and (c) CuPd NPs. Reprinted with permission from ref 329. Copyright
2009 Royal Society of Chemistry.
ion batteries, mainly due to its high abundance and low cost.
Graphene nanostructures, as highly conductive materials, acting
as substrates for the deposition of Mn3O4 could help overcome
the low conductivity of this metal oxide. In a characteristic
example a RGO/Mn3O4 composite aorded a high capacity of
810 mAhg1 with good rate capability and cycling stability.340
The decoration of RGO by well crystallized Mn3O4 NPs was
achieved by the hydrolysis of a Mn salt in a suspension of GO in
DMF/H2O followed by hydrothermal reduction of the GO
(Figure 60).
Improved anode performance in Li-ion batteries has also been
noted using composites of graphene or RGO and metal oxides
such as MnO2,341 CuO,342 Co3O4,343345 CoO,346 Fe3O4,347
TiO2,348 and Li4Ti5O12.349 For example, the RGO/Co3O4
composite is formed by deposition of cobalt on RGO
nanoplatelets in the form of Co(OH)2 followed by calcination
at 450 C (Figure 61).
The graphene/TiO2 composite has been widely examined and
its synthesis and physical properties have been reported by
several researchers.18,348,350353 An illustrative example of the
use of the nanostructured RGO/TiO2 hybrid is presented by
Wang et al.348 where they demonstrated the enhanced Li-ion
insertion/extraction kinetics in TiO2. This makes the material a
candidate for use in Li-ion batteries or other energy storage
materials. For the preparation of the composite, RGO nanoplatelets were dispersed in water by stabilizing them with sodium
dodecyl sulfate. To this solution, a TiCl3 solution was added,
which resulted in deposition of TiO2 NPs upon hydrolysis
(Figure 62).
Figure 58. (left) Schematic representation of the formation of RGO/SnO2 and its use in Li ion batteries and (right) cyclic performances for (a) SnO2
nanoparticles, (b) graphite, (c) RGO nanoplatelets, and (d) RGO/SnO2. Reprinted with permission from ref 330. Copyright 2008 American Chemical
Society.
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Figure 60. Mn3O4 NPs grown on GO: (a) schematic two-step synthesis
of Mn3O4/RGO, (b) SEM image of the Mn3O4/RGO composite, (c)
XRD spectrum of Mn3O4/RGO, (d) TEM image of Mn3O4/RGO with
inset showing the electron diraction pattern of the Mn3O4 NPs on
RGO, and (e) high-resolution TEM image of an individual Mn3O4 NP
on RGO. Reprinted with permission from ref 340. Copyright 2010
American Chemical Society.
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Figure 61. Schematic representation of the formation of the RGO/Co3O4 composite: (a) dispersion of RGO in isopropyl alcohol/water solution, (b)
formation of RGO/Co(OH)2 composite, and (c) formation of RGO/Co3O4 composite by calcination. Reprinted with permission from ref 343.
Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Figure 62. The growth of TiO2 on surfactant-stabilized GO nanoplatelets. Reprinted with permission from ref 348. Copyright 2009 American Chemical
Society.
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Figure 64. (left) The change in color of a suspension of GO/TiO2 before and after UV irradiation. A suspension of TiO2 NPs is also shown for
comparison. (right) Absorption spectra of UV-irradiated TiO2 suspension (a) before and (bd) after the addition of GO suspensions: (b) 50, (c) 150,
and (d) 300 g of GO (a0 corresponds to the TiO2 suspension prior to UV irradiation). Reprinted with permission from ref 18. Copyright 2008
American Chemical Society.
applications such as biological labeling, solar cells, and lightemitting devices.364367 However, several obstacles need to be
overcome for their use. As an example, the use of QDs in solar
cells suers from diculty in transferring the charge carriers away
from the QD in the device.368 GO nanoplatelets decorated with
QDs could act as nanowires that promote direct charge transport
and ecient charge transfer to QDs, thus increasing their
eciency in solar cells.
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Figure 70. Deposition of magnetite nanoparticles on RGO nanoplatelets. Reprinted with permission from ref 362. Copyright 2010 Royal
Society of Chemistry.
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Figure 73. Schematic representation of the formation of RGO/CdSe NP composite. Reprinted with permission from ref 372. Copyright 2011 Royal
Society of Chemistry.
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5. SUBSTITUTIONAL DOPING
A particularly distinctive position in this chapter should be given
to the substitutional doping of graphenes, where carbon atoms
from the hexagonal honeycomb lattice of graphene can be
substituted by nitrogen or boron atoms. Depending on the
electrophilic character of the atoms that substitute the carbon
atoms, the doped graphene sheets show n- or p-type behavior. In
addition, by controlling the degree of this doping modication,
the electrical properties of graphene could be potentially tailored,
thereby expanding remarkably the application of graphene in
nanoelectronics.
The incorporation of nitrogen atoms is made using their three
sp3 orbitals; this leads to their lone pair electrons being
conjugated with the graphitic -system. The N-doped graphene
sheets are electron-rich so that n-type semiconducting behavior
is expected. In general, N-doped graphene sheets are formed by
the substitution of O or C atoms with N during reduction or
annealing43,376378 or in situ during graphene growth using
CVD,379 arc discharge,380 or solvothermal methods.381 Oxygen
or sp3 carbon atoms that are situated at the defect sites of GO can
be substituted by nitrogen during the reduction step using a
nitrogen-rich reductive source like ammonia or hydrazine, at high
temperature.
Starting from graphene nanoribbons (GNRs), Wang et al.43
demonstrated N-doping using high-power electrical joule
heating in ammonia gas. The chemically derived GNRs were
dispersed on a SiO2/Si chip and immobilized between a
palladium metal source/drain (SD) forming a FET-like device
(Figure 77). The GNR was electrically annealed under an NH3/
Ar atmosphere. The existence of CN bonds in the derived
GNR was identied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS)
and nanometer-scale secondary ion mass spectroscopy. In this
case, the CN bonds are formed mostly at the edges of graphene
sheets where the chemical reactivity is higher.
Figure 75. (a) AFM image of GO and (b) related height prole, (c) Si/
GO composite paper, and (d) Si/RGO composite paper obtained by
reduction of Si/GO. Reprinted with permission from ref 373. Copyright
2010 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Chemical Reviews
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Figure 78. Schematic structure of GO and N-doped GO produced by hydrothermal reduction. Reprinted with permission from ref 377. Copyright 2010
American Chemical Society.
Figure 79. A possible mechanism for the solvothermal synthesis of N-doped graphene. Reprinted with permission from ref 381. Copyright 2011
American Chemical Society.
Figure 80. (a) Concentration of chemically induced charge carriers in SLG exposed to dierent concentrations of NO2 and (b) changes in resistivity at
zero B eld caused by graphenes exposure to various gases diluted to 1 ppm. Reprinted with permission from ref 384a. Copyright 2008 American
Chemical Society.
Chemical Reviews
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Figure 81. (a) A general bottom-gated graphene FET structure with phenyl-SAM interface engineering. (b) Illustration of chemical bonding of the
organosilane SAM to the hydroxyl group-enriched dielectric surface. (c) AFM image of a spin-coated ultrasmooth phenyl-SAM with surface roughness
of 0.10.2 nm in rms. (d) Microscopy image of a large-area, uniform CVD graphene as patterned to various shapes on a phenyl-SAM engineered silicon
oxide wafer. Reprinted with permission from ref 390. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
Figure 82. Transferred monolayer graphene on patterned selfassembled monolayer (SAM)-modied SiO2 substrate (top left). UV
photoemission spectra of the graphene lms on dierent SAM-modied
substrates show work function changes (top right). Chemical structure
of N,N-ditridencyl-3,4,9,10-perylene-tetracarboxylic diimide (PTCDIC13) and schematic FET structure using PTCDI-13 as an active layer
and graphene as source/drain electrodes (bottom left). Transfer
characteristics of PTCDI-C13 FETs with graphene electrodes on
dierent SAM-modied SiO2s (bottom right). Reprinted with
permission from ref 46. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 83. AFM images of pentacene lms (50 nm) near the interface between SiO2: (a) untreated graphene electrodes and (b) thermally treated
graphene electrodes. Schematic representations of the possible molecular packing orientations near the interface between SiO2 and (c) untreated
graphene electrodes or (d) thermally treated graphene electrodes. Reprinted with permission from ref 391b. Copyright 2011 Wiley.
Figure 84. Schematic models of the bilayer graphene (BLG), the BLG doped with FeCl3 (aBGL) composite system, the BLG dual-doped with FeCl3 and
K (aBLG+K), and the BLG doped with K (BLG+K) (top), tight binding parameters for the onsite potential dierence () obtained by DFT calculation
(center), and band structures calculated by tight binding method and the Dirac point shifts (D) obtained by DFT calculation (bottom). Reprinted with
permission from ref 394. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 86. (a) Raman spectra of intercalated FLGs. (b) Atomic structural model; carbon atoms are shown as gray spheres, iron atoms as red, and
chlorine atoms as brown. (c) Transport measurements of an intercalated bilayer device; Shubnikov-de Haas (SdH) oscillations seen in Rxx(B) are
recorded at temperatures 2, 10, 20, and 40 K. Reprinted with permission from ref 396. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
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Figure 87. (a) First and fourth cyclic voltammograms of the Ni/FLG electrode in polymer electrolyte and (b) in situ Raman spectra of the Ni/FLG
electrode at selected potentials during electrochemical lithiation. Reprinted with permission from ref 398a. Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Figure 88. Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations for ideal GOF-n
structures with n graphene carbons per linker. The structures of three
examples with n = 64, 32, and 8 are also shown. GOF materials are
formed of layers of GO connected by benzenediboronic acid pillars.
Reprinted with permission from ref 399. Copyright 2010 Wiley.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 90. Schematic illustration of the LbL deposition of GO and PW clusters and the photoreduction of GO. Cationic polyelectrolytes
polyethyleneimine (PEI) and PAH are used as electrostatic linkers. Reprinted with permission from ref 402. Copyright 2011 American Chemical
Society.
Figure 91. Optical images of a GO/PW multilayer lm on a quartz substrate before (A) and after (B) 6 h of UV photoreduction and on a exible PET
substrate before (C) and after (D) 6 h of UV photoreduction. Both substrates were coated using a PET/PW precursor lm. Reprinted with permission
from ref 402. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
Figure 92. Schematic representation of a hybrid multilayer composite of functionalized MWNTs and RGO. Reprinted with permission from ref 401.
Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 93. Schematic illustration of the preparation of a GO/ionic liquid multilayered composite and their LbL assembly on a quartz crystal
microbalance (QCM). Reprinted with permission from ref 403. Copyright 2010 Wiley.
Figure 95. Schematic ZGNR-based spin-valve device (left) with parallel and antiparallel spin congurations and the corresponding spin-magnetization
density isosurfaces. The blue boxes represent ferromagnetic electrodes to control spin polarization of the ZGNR device and the red arrows indicate the
directions of spin congurations. In the isosurfaces, red/blue color denotes up/down spin, and a ZGNR skeleton is drawn in green color. Spin-transfer
paths (right) from the left to right density of states of the ferromagnetic leads for parallel (P) and antiparallel (AP) spin congurations in a ZGNR spinvalve device are compared with those in a conventional spin-valve device. Reprinted with permission from refs 29 and 409. Copyright 2008 Nature
Publishing group and Copyright 2010 American Chemical Society, repectively.
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Figure 96. Simulation results of the transport property for 5GCATCGCT-3. (a) Time-dependent histogram of the transmission
peak positions (red (blue) denoting maximal (minimal) values). The
histogram shows features of Cyt (SC), Gua (SG), Ade/Cyt (SA/C), and
Gua/Thy (SG/T) corresponding to the band centered around E EF = Es
= 1.8, 0.65, 1.2, and 1.65 eV, respectively. The height of each right
box represents the energy range of integration for Sbase. (b) Plots of
Sbase(t) with respect to time as a ssDNA passes. The sequence
GCATCGCT can be partly resolved. (c) Final base sequence obtained
from the analysis of panel b and 2D TACF, C(t,t0;) analysis. Reprinted
with permission from ref 37. Copyright 2011 Nature Publishing Group.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 100. Photocatalytic activity of SEGP25 and SRGOP25 nanocomposites. (A) Pseudorst-order CH3CHO photo-oxidation rate constants for
SEGP25 and SRGOP25 nanocomposites under ultraviolet (365 nm) and visible illumination. (B) CO2 photoreduction for SEGP25 and SRGO
P25 nanocomposites under ultraviolet (365 nm) and visible illumination. Reprinted with permission from ref 429. Copyright 2011 American Chemical
Society.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 101. GON-induced cancer cell therapy. Reprinted with permission from ref 443. Copyright 2012 Wiley.
Chemical Reviews
Review
Figure 102. Fluorescent images of human breast cancer cell T47D after incubation with green GQDs for 4 h: (a) phase contrast picture of T47D cells;
(b) individual nucleus stained blue with DAPI; (c) agglomerated green GQDs surrounding each nucleus; (d) the overlay high contrast image of
nucleolus stained with blue DAPI and GQDs (green) staining. Reprinted with permission from ref 445. Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society.
Figure 103. (a) In vitro uorescence microscopy images of T47D cells treated with GO-F (50 g mL1) for 24 h. (iiii) Low magnication images of
T47D cells: (i) phase contrast picture, (ii) uorescence images of GO-F, and (iii) overlay of images i and ii. (ivvi) High magnication images of an
individual T47D cell: (iv) phase contrast picture of an individual T47D cell, (v) uorescence image of GO-F, and (vi) overlay of images iv and v. (b) T2weighted MR image showing strong T2 contrast in agarose phantoms. It shows alginate phantoms doped with dierent concentrations (as shown) of
GO-F. The T2-weighted image was acquired in a 7 T scanner with multislice multiecho sequence. The T2 relaxivity was 297.06 mM1 s1. Reprinted
with permission from ref 447. Copyright 2012 Wiley.
Chemical Reviews
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6.5. Bio-imaging
Chemical Reviews
Review
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Corresponding Author
*R.Z.: e-mail address [email protected]; telephone +420-58563-4947; fax +420-58-563-4958. K.S.K.: e-mail address kim@
postech.ac.kr; telephone +82-54-279-2110; fax +82-54-2798137.
Notes
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Korea NRF (National Honor
Scientist Program Grant 2010-0020414, WCU Grant R32-2008000-10180-0), KISTI (Grant KSC-2011-G3-02), Grant Agency
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