Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry

Graphene has been touted as the next "wonder material" for various applications, owing to its excellent properties. The development of novel graphene materials enables hitherto unavailable characteristics for electrochemical applications, while in-depth and systematic study of graphene mat...

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Main Author: Wong, Colin Hong An
Other Authors: Martin Pumera
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69823
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-698232023-02-28T23:37:32Z Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry Wong, Colin Hong An Martin Pumera School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences DRNTU::Science Graphene has been touted as the next "wonder material" for various applications, owing to its excellent properties. The development of novel graphene materials enables hitherto unavailable characteristics for electrochemical applications, while in-depth and systematic study of graphene materials is necessary to understand its electrochemistry. Hence, new synthesis methods were explored using carbon nanotubes as a precursor to produce graphene materials, with analysis on the types of products formed and the effect of residual metallic impurities. A novel method for the reduction of graphene oxide nanoribbons was demonstrated to afford graphene nanoribbons with superior properties than those using conventional chemical reduction. The synthesis of graphene materials using rapid microwave treatment was also studied to provide insight on the influence of the precursor graphite oxide, with the procedure then being modified to successfully synthesize sulfur-doped materials that exhibited electrocatalytic activity. On the other hand, comprehensive investigations on current synthetic procedures were also conducted, revealing the impact of different methods on the levels of metallic impurity contamination of the graphene materials. The choice of graphite source was also shown to have varying, compounding effects on the properties of the resulting graphite oxides and graphene materials. Different techniques for the transfer of CVD graphene were compared in order to determine the most suitable method to obtain graphene films for electrochemical applications. These studies thus serve the dual purpose of expanding the synthetic toolbox available for graphene production as well as provide insight on the suitability of graphene materials for various electrochemical applications. ​Doctor of Philosophy (SPMS) 2017-03-29T03:49:08Z 2017-03-29T03:49:08Z 2017 Thesis Wong, C. H. A. (2017). Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69823 10.32657/10356/69823 en 214 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Wong, Colin Hong An
Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
description Graphene has been touted as the next "wonder material" for various applications, owing to its excellent properties. The development of novel graphene materials enables hitherto unavailable characteristics for electrochemical applications, while in-depth and systematic study of graphene materials is necessary to understand its electrochemistry. Hence, new synthesis methods were explored using carbon nanotubes as a precursor to produce graphene materials, with analysis on the types of products formed and the effect of residual metallic impurities. A novel method for the reduction of graphene oxide nanoribbons was demonstrated to afford graphene nanoribbons with superior properties than those using conventional chemical reduction. The synthesis of graphene materials using rapid microwave treatment was also studied to provide insight on the influence of the precursor graphite oxide, with the procedure then being modified to successfully synthesize sulfur-doped materials that exhibited electrocatalytic activity. On the other hand, comprehensive investigations on current synthetic procedures were also conducted, revealing the impact of different methods on the levels of metallic impurity contamination of the graphene materials. The choice of graphite source was also shown to have varying, compounding effects on the properties of the resulting graphite oxides and graphene materials. Different techniques for the transfer of CVD graphene were compared in order to determine the most suitable method to obtain graphene films for electrochemical applications. These studies thus serve the dual purpose of expanding the synthetic toolbox available for graphene production as well as provide insight on the suitability of graphene materials for various electrochemical applications.
author2 Martin Pumera
author_facet Martin Pumera
Wong, Colin Hong An
format Theses and Dissertations
author Wong, Colin Hong An
author_sort Wong, Colin Hong An
title Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
title_short Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
title_full Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
title_fullStr Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
title_full_unstemmed Chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
title_sort chemical modification of graphenes : synthesis and electrochemistry
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69823
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