欧美伦理一区二区-91视频网页-国产高清在线视频-国产黄色在线-免费的黄色-日本精品视频在线观看

新聞動(dòng)態(tài)
NEWS
Location:Chinese Academy of Sciences > NEWS  > News in field Graphene

Laser beam hammers graphene into 3D shapes

Come: Chinese Academy of Sciences    Date: 2017-10-13 09:15:05


           Graphene, a sheet of carbon just one atom thick, can be forged into 3D shapes using a pulsed laser beam, according to new experiments by researchers in Finland and Taiwan. The technique, dubbed optical forging, works thanks to the laser light expanding local areas in graphene, and it could be used to fabricate 3D architectures for new types of graphene-based devices in the future.
     The laser beam induces small changes in the lattice structure of graphene by producing defects in it, explains team leader Mika Pettersson of the University of Jyväskylä. This, in turn, slightly expands the lattice, which leads to the material bulging. By drawing patterns on the graphene with a tightly focused beam, we can build structures with variable shapes and can accurately control their height by controlling the irradiation dose.
     The process is quite simple and uses standard laser sources, he tells nanotechweb.org. We call it optical forging since it is much like the way a blacksmith uses a hammer to forge a metal into 3D shapes. In our case, the laser beam is the hammer for the graphene sheet.
    One example of a shape that the researchers can make using their technique is a pyramid that is 60 nm high, which is roughly 200 times bigger than the thickness of the graphene sheet itself.
Difficult to controllably shape graphene into 3D shapes
    Graphene is the most widely studied of all 2D materials. It boasts excellent carrier mobility, has a high strength, is flexible and transparent, and absorbs light over a broad range of wavelengths. It could be ideal for making novel electronics, photonics and optoelectronics devices and has already been used to make sensors, field-effect transistors, supercapacitors and photodetectors.
    Although graphene is a 2D sheet of carbon, it is not, strictly speaking, flat but contains corrugations, wrinkles, ripples and other out-of-plane deformations. These structures can be exploited to modify the electronic properties of the material, but controlling them is no easy task. Until now, researchers have modified the surface of graphene using techniques such as spot blistering, substrate moulding and strain-induced periodic modulation, or by cutting the material and connecting graphene flakes to functional groups. They have not, however, been able to controllably shape graphene into more complex, custom-made 3D architectures.
Femtosecond laser pulses induce local strain
     Pettersson and colleagues have now succeeded in forging graphene into free-standing 3D shapes by exploiting the fact that femtosecond laser pulses induce local strain into the material when applied in an inert atmosphere. Although the researchers knew that laser irradiation in air functionalizes graphene with oxygen-containing groups, they say that irradiation in an inert atmosphere has a fundamentally different effect and produces structural defects rather than chemically-doped ones.
    We do not yet know what the exact atomic-level mechanism behind the structural deformation is, but preliminary evidence (from atomic force microscopy images, for example), indicates that it comes from the expansion of the graphene lattice caused by photo-induced structural modification, says Pettersson. Graphene is highly promising for applications in a wide range of different fields, such as transparent and flexible electronics, optoelectronics and sensors, and the 3D version of material has many properties that will allow for the development of new kinds of devices.
    The team, reporting its work in Nano Letters DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b03530, says that it is now busy trying to understand the mechanisms behind the laser-induced structural deformation in graphene. The key to this is the atomic-level structure of the 3D material, says Pettersson and once we have understood this, it will be time to work on developing applications for it.

< Previous Nacre-like graphene composite is stro...Graphene bubbles measure shear forces Next >

?
Tel:+86-28-85241016,+86-28-85236765    Fax:+86-28-85215069,+86-28-85223978    E-mail:carbon@cioc.ac.cn,times@cioc.ac.cn,nano@cioc.ac.cn
QQ:800069832    Technical Support ac57.com
Copyright © Chengdu Organic Chemicals Co. Ltd., Chinese Academy of Sciences 2003-2025. manage 蜀ICP備05020035號(hào)-3
主站蜘蛛池模板: 一区二区三区不卡在线 | 久草网站| 99超级碰碰成人香蕉网 | 伊人久色 | 精品国产日韩亚洲一区二区 | 波多野结衣在线播放 | 台湾三级毛片 | 久久精品99 | 精品九九在线 | 欧美毛片aaa激情 | 亚洲午夜精品久久久久久抢 | 精品欧美亚洲韩国日本久久 | 国产欧美日韩亚洲 | 最新国产午夜精品视频不卡 | 亚洲成a人不卡在线观看 | 久草视| 中文字幕在线看片成人 | 国产国语在线播放视频 | 久久er视频 | 欧美有码在线观看 | 日韩中文字幕精品一区在线 | 看真人一级毛片 | 亚洲高清一区二区三区 | 国内精品不卡一区二区三区 | 国产成人综合在线 | 免费播放aa在线视频成人 | www.黄色片| 日韩在线视频观看 | 高清一区二区三区免费 | 免费一区二区三区久久 | 一区二区三区免费观看 | 末成年娇小性色xxxxx | 中文字幕亚洲一区二区三区 | 日本免费在线一区 | 国产成人亚洲综合无 | 免费a级毛片网站 | 久色精品 | 91在线亚洲| 日韩欧美不卡在线 | 亚洲成人一区 | 三级黄色毛片网站 |