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CARBON WORLDS
Graphene decharging and molecular shielding
by Staff Writers
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Feb 09, 2016


This image shows a graphene layer as an effective chemical shield, which regulates the level of molecular interactions. Image courtesy AnanikovLab. For a larger version of this image please go here.

Joint theoretical and experimental study suggested that graphene sheets efficiently shield chemical interactions.

One of the promising applications of this phenomenon is associated with im-proving quality of 2D materials by "de-charging" of charged defect centers on the surface of carbon materials.

Another important feature is the ability to control selectivity and activity of the supported metallic catalysts M/C on the carbon substrate.

Researchers studied carbon materials with defects on the surface (such defects represent an active species, which should be shielded).

Indeed, the experiments demonstrated that the defects areas are quite reactive and, as one may expect, defect sites retain high activity towards various molecules.

However, as soon as the defects were covered with few layers of graphene flakes, the distribution of reactive centers became uniform (without localized reactivity centers typical for de-fect areas).

In other words, covering of the surface defects with graphene layers has decreased the influence of charged defects and made them "invisible" in terms of chemical interactions at the mo-lecular level.

The article Shielding the chemical reactivity using graphene layers for controlling the sur-face properties of carbon materials by Alexandr E. Sedykh, Evgeniy G. Gordeev, Evgeniy O. Pentsak, Valentine P. Ananikov was published in Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics journal (Royal Society of Chemistry).


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Related Links
Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences
Carbon Worlds - where graphite, diamond, amorphous, fullerenes meet






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