Abstract
Iron carbide nanoparticles (NPs) encapsulated by multilayer graphene, Fe3C@graphene, were produced by one-step chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at high temperature (950 °C) with ferrocene powder as a precursor and a copper foil surface as a catalyst. At high temperature, the ferrocene molecules adsorb dissociatively on copper catalysts, forming a layer of graphene decorated by core-shell Fe3C@graphene NPs. At high temperature, graphene has a low surface energy, allowing the lateral diffusion of iron atoms and carbon fragments to form NPs. The as-prepared core-shell Fe3C@graphene NPs have varying diameter from 50 to 80 nm, while the graphene shells vary from 8 to 40 graphene layers. The results demonstrate that the thickness of the graphene shell growth for NPs increases with increasing reaction time from 1 to 7 h. Graphene-assisted NP growth allows the formation of uniform core-shell Fe3C@graphene particles rather than carbon nanotube formation. The synthesized NPs were analyzed via different surface-sensitive techniques and magnetic measurement methods to determine their structural and magnetic properties. Our work provides a rapid and general procedure for core-shell Fe3C@graphene synthesis by using a CVD technique. ©
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Alahmadi, M., & Siaj, M. (2018). Graphene-Assisted Magnetic Iron Carbide Nanoparticle Growth. ACS Applied Nano Materials, 1(12), 7000–7005. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.8b01794
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