Superlattices have attracted great interest because of their tailorable electronic properties at the interface. However, the lack of an efficient and low-cost synthetic method represents a huge challenge to implement superlattices into practical applications. Herein, we report a space-confined nanoreactor strategy to synthesize flexible freestanding graphene-based superlattice nanosheets, which consist of alternately intercalated monolayered metal-oxide frameworks and graphene. Taking vanadium oxide as an example, clear-cut evidences in extended X-ray absorption fine structure, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and infrared spectra have confirmed that the vanadium oxide frameworks in the superlattice nanosheets show high symmetry derived from the space-confinement and electron-donor effect of graphene layers, which enable the superlattice nanosheets to show emerging magnetocaloric effect. Undoubtedly, this freestanding and flexible superlattice synthesized from a low-cost and scalable method avoids complex transferring processes from growth substrates for final applications and thus should be beneficial to a wide variety of functionalized devices. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Zhu, H., Xiao, C., Cheng, H., Grote, F., Zhang, X., Yao, T., … Xie, Y. (2014). Magnetocaloric effects in a freestanding and flexible graphene-based superlattice synthesized with a spatially confined reaction. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4960
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