Dopant-specific unzipping of carbon nanotubes for intact crystalline graphene nanostructures

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Abstract

Atomic level engineering of graphene-based materials is in high demand to enable customize structures and properties for different applications. Unzipping of the graphene plane is a potential means to this end, but uncontrollable damage of the two-dimensional crystalline framework during harsh unzipping reaction has remained a key challenge. Here we present heteroatom dopant-specific unzipping of carbon nanotubes as a reliable and controllable route to customized intact crystalline graphene-based nanostructures. Substitutional pyridinic nitrogen dopant sites at carbon nanotubes can selectively initiate the unzipping of graphene side walls at a relatively low electrochemical potential (0.6 V). The resultant nanostructures consisting of unzipped graphene nanoribbons wrapping around carbon nanotube cores maintain the intact two-dimensional crystallinity with well-defined atomic configuration at the unzipped edges. Large surface area and robust electrical connectivity of the synergistic nanostructure demonstrate ultrahigh-power supercapacitor performance, which can serve for AC filtering with the record high rate capability of -85° of phase angle at 120 Hz.

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Lim, J., Maiti, U. N., Kim, N. Y., Narayan, R., Lee, W. J., Choi, D. S., … Kim, S. O. (2016). Dopant-specific unzipping of carbon nanotubes for intact crystalline graphene nanostructures. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms10364

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