Loading...

Graphene jet nanomotors in remote controllable self-Propulsion swimmers in pure water

Akhavan, O ; Sharif University of Technology

600 Viewed
  1. Type of Document: Article
  2. DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b02175
  3. Publisher: American Chemical Society
  4. Abstract:
  5. A remote controllable working graphite nanostructured swimmer based on a graphene jet nanomotor has been demonstrated for the first time. Graphite particles with pyramidal-like morphologies were fabricated by the creation of suitable defects in wide high-purity graphite flakes followed by a severe sonication. The particles were able to be self-exfoliated in water after Na intercalation between the graphene constituents. The self-exfoliation resulted in jet ejection of graphene flakes from the end of the swimmers (with speeds as high as ∼7000 m/s), producing a driving force (at least ∼0.7 L (pN) where L (μm) is swimmer size) and consequently the motion of the swimmer (with average speed of ∼17-40 μm/s). The jet ejection of the graphene flakes was assigned to the explosion of H2 nanobubbles produced between the Na intercalated flakes. The direction of motion of the swimmers equipped with TiO2 nanoparticles (NPs) can be controlled by applying a magnetic field in the presence of UV irradiation (higher UV intensity, lower radius of rotation). In fact, the negative surface charge of the graphene flakes of the swimmers increased by UV irradiation due to transferring the photoexcited electrons of TiO2 NPs into the flakes. Because of higher production of H2 nanobubbles under UV irradiation, the speed of swimmers exposed to UV light significantly increased. In contrast, UV irradiation with various intensities could not affect total distance traversed by the self-exfoliated swimmers having the same initial sizes. These confirmed the mass ejection mechanism for motion of the swimmers. The self-exfoliation of swimmers (and so their motion) occurred only in water (and not, e.g., in organic solutions). Such swimmers promise the design of remote controllable nanovehicles with the capability of initiating and/or improving their operations in response to environmental changes in order to realize broad ranges of versatile and fantastic nanotechnology-based applications
  6. Keywords:
  7. fuel-free swimmers ; nanomachine ; Fighter aircraft ; Graphite ; Irradiation ; Nanomagnetics ; Nanotechnology ; Remote control ; Sodium ; Titanium dioxide ; Direction of motion ; Environmental change ; Nanobubbles ; Negative surface charges ; Photoexcited electrons ; Radius of rotations ; self-exfoliation ; Graphene
  8. Source: Nano Letters ; Volume 16, Issue 9 , 2016 , Pages 5619-5630 ; 15306984 (ISSN)
  9. URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b02175