Abstract

In recent years, graphene has found its use in numerous industrial applications due to its unique properties. While its impermeable and conductive nature can replace currently used anticorrosive toxic pigments in coating systems, due to its large strength to weight ratio, graphene can be an important component as a next-generation additive for automotive, aerospace and construction applications. The current bottlenecks in using graphene and graphene oxide and other two-dimensional materials are the availability of cost-effective, high-quality materials and their effective incorporation (functionalization and dispersion) into the product matrices. On overcoming these factors, graphene may attract significant demands in terms of volume consumption. Graphene can be produced on industrial scales and through cost-effective top-down routes such as chemical, electrochemical and/or high-pressure mechanical exfoliation. Graphene, depending on end applications, can be chemically tuned and modified via functionalization so that easy incorporation into product matrices is possible. This paper discusses different production methods and their impact on the quality of graphene produced in terms of energy input. Graphene with an average thickness below five layers was produced by both methods with varied defects. However, a higher yield of graphene with a lower number of layers was produced via the high-pressure exfoliation route.This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘A cracking approach to inventing new tough materials: fracture stranger than friction’.

Highlights

  • Ever since it was separated from bulk graphite for the first time in 2004 [1], graphene has come under the spotlight of scientific research

  • Given that the process of high pressure is not expected to introduce any oxygen to the graphene domains and support Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results, it seems that the feed stock expanded graphite should have some extent of oxygen

  • We have investigated the quality of graphene produced by a novel production method combining electrochemical exfoliation and high-pressure shear exfoliation, in aqueous media royalsocietypublishing.org/journal/rsta Phil

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Summary

Graphene production by cracking

The current bottlenecks in using graphene and graphene oxide and other two-dimensional materials are the availability of cost-effective, highquality materials and their effective incorporation (functionalization and dispersion) into the product matrices. On overcoming these factors, graphene may attract significant demands in terms of volume consumption. Graphene can be produced on industrial scales and through cost-effective top-down routes such as chemical, electrochemical and/or high-pressure mechanical exfoliation. This paper discusses different production methods and their impact on the quality of graphene produced in terms of energy input. A higher yield of graphene with a lower number of layers was produced via the high-pressure exfoliation route. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘A cracking approach to inventing new tough materials: fracture stranger than friction’

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