We describe a fast and versatile method to functionalize high-quality graphene with organic molecules by exploiting the synergistic effect of supramolecular and covalent chemistry. With this goal, we designed and synthesized molecules comprising a long aliphatic chain and an aryl diazonium salt. Thanks to the long chain, these molecules physisorb from solution onto CVD graphene or bulk graphite, self-assembling in an ordered monolayer. The sample is successively transferred into an aqueous electrolyte, to block any reorganization or desorption of the monolayer. An electrochemical impulse is used to transform the diazonium group into a radical capable of grafting covalently to the substrate and transforming the physisorption into a covalent chemisorption. During covalent grafting in water, the molecules retain the ordered packing formed upon self assembly. Our two-step approach is characterized by the independent control over the processes of immobilization of molecules on the substrate and their covalent tethering, enabling fast (t < 10 s) covalent functionalization of graphene. This strategy is highly versatile and works with many carbon-based materials including graphene deposited on silicon, plastic, and quartz as well as highly oriented pyrolytic graphite.

Electrochemical Functionalization of Graphene at the Nanoscale with Self-Assembling Diazonium Salts

Xia Zhenyuan;Leonardi Francesca;Liscio Andrea;Kovtun Alessandro;Treossi Emanuele;Palermo Vincenzo
2016

Abstract

We describe a fast and versatile method to functionalize high-quality graphene with organic molecules by exploiting the synergistic effect of supramolecular and covalent chemistry. With this goal, we designed and synthesized molecules comprising a long aliphatic chain and an aryl diazonium salt. Thanks to the long chain, these molecules physisorb from solution onto CVD graphene or bulk graphite, self-assembling in an ordered monolayer. The sample is successively transferred into an aqueous electrolyte, to block any reorganization or desorption of the monolayer. An electrochemical impulse is used to transform the diazonium group into a radical capable of grafting covalently to the substrate and transforming the physisorption into a covalent chemisorption. During covalent grafting in water, the molecules retain the ordered packing formed upon self assembly. Our two-step approach is characterized by the independent control over the processes of immobilization of molecules on the substrate and their covalent tethering, enabling fast (t < 10 s) covalent functionalization of graphene. This strategy is highly versatile and works with many carbon-based materials including graphene deposited on silicon, plastic, and quartz as well as highly oriented pyrolytic graphite.
2016
Istituto per la Sintesi Organica e la Fotoreattivita' - ISOF
Inglese
10
7
7125
7134
10
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.6b03278
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
graphene
electrochemistry
diazonium salts
self-assembly
6
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Xia, Zhenyuan; Leonardi, Francesca; Gobbi, Marco; Liu, Yi; Bellani, Vittorio; Liscio, Andrea; Kovtun, Alessandro; Li, Rongjin; Feng, Xinliang; Orgiu, ...espandi
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
   GraphenE-orgaNIc hybrid architectures for organic electronics: a mUltiSite training action
   GENIUS
   FP7
   264694

   bottom-UP blueprinting GRAphene baseD Electronics
   UPGRADE
   FP7
   309056

   Integrated self-assembled SWITCHable systems and materials: towards responsive organic electronics - a multi-site innovative training action
   iSwitch
   H2020
   642196
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/326814
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