Issue 8, 2013

How graphene crumples are stabilized?

Abstract

Forced crumpling of graphene and graphene oxides sheets and their reversibilities are explored here by performing molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, with focus on the stabilizing mechanisms and properties of crumples. We find that to balance strain energy stored in crumpled sheets, dangling bonds in graphene show significant chemical activity in forming covalent crosslinks. Interlayer van der Waals cohesion helps also to maintain the crumpled conformation after the compressive load is released. A distinct size-dependent behavior of the process is observed, implying competition between these driven forces. These results suggest possibilities in controlling the reversibility in crumpling graphene sheets into nanoparticles and highlight the effects of chemically active graphene edges, defective sites, van der Waals and hydrogen-bond cohesion in defining microstructures of graphene-based materials.

Graphical abstract: How graphene crumples are stabilized?

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jul 2012
Accepted
10 Dec 2012
First published
11 Dec 2012

RSC Adv., 2013,3, 2720-2726

How graphene crumples are stabilized?

C. Chang, Z. Song, J. Lin and Z. Xu, RSC Adv., 2013, 3, 2720 DOI: 10.1039/C2RA21563B

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