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  4. Proton and Li-Ion Permeation through Graphene with Eight-Atom-Ring Defects
 
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Proton and Li-Ion Permeation through Graphene with Eight-Atom-Ring Defects

Source
ACS Nano
ISSN
19360851
Date Issued
2020-06-23
Author(s)
Griffin, Eoin
Mogg, Lucas
Hao, Guang Ping
Kalon, Gopinadhan  
Bacaksiz, Cihan
Lopez-Polin, Guillermo
Lopez-Polin, Guillermo
Zhou, T. Y.
Guarochico, Victor
Cai, Junhao
Neumann, Christof
Winter, Andreas
Mohn, Michael
Lee, Jong Hak
Lin, Junhao
Kaiser, Ute
Grigorieva, Irina V.
Suenaga, Kazu
Özyilmaz, Barbaros
Cheng, Hui Min
Cheng, Hui Min
Ren, Wencai
Turchanin, Andrey
Peeters, Francois M.
Geim, Andre K.
Lozada-Hidalgo, Marcelo
DOI
10.1021/acsnano.0c02496
Volume
14
Issue
6
Abstract
Defect-free graphene is impermeable to gases and liquids but highly permeable to thermal protons. Atomic-scale defects such as vacancies, grain boundaries, and Stone-Wales defects are predicted to enhance graphene's proton permeability and may even allow small ions through, whereas larger species such as gas molecules should remain blocked. These expectations have so far remained untested in experiment. Here, we show that atomically thin carbon films with a high density of atomic-scale defects continue blocking all molecular transport, but their proton permeability becomes ∼1000 times higher than that of defect-free graphene. Lithium ions can also permeate through such disordered graphene. The enhanced proton and ion permeability is attributed to a high density of eight-carbon-atom rings. The latter pose approximately twice lower energy barriers for incoming protons compared to that of the six-atom rings of graphene and a relatively low barrier of ∼0.6 eV for Li ions. Our findings suggest that disordered graphene could be of interest as membranes and protective barriers in various Li-ion and hydrogen technologies.
Publication link
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2005.09418
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/24116
Subjects
battery | disorder | fuel cell | graphene | lithium ion | proton
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