Versatile graphene: When a highly conductive graphene sheet is exposed to hydrogen atoms (white), they attach to the carbon atoms (black), transforming the material into graphane, an insulator. This is the first evidence that graphene’s properties can be manipulated chemically.
P. Huey/Science

Computing

New Carbon Nanomaterial

A simple chemical trick changes graphene into a compound with different electronic properties.

  • Friday, January 30, 2009
  • By Prachi Patel

Graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb-like structure, has captured worldwide interest because of its attractive electronic properties. Now, by adding hydrogen to graphene, researchers at the University of Manchester, U.K., have made a new material that could prove useful for hydrogen storage and future carbon-based integrated circuits. While graphene is highly conductive, the new material, called graphane, is an insulator. The researchers can easily convert it back into conductive graphene by heating it to a high temperature.

Andre Geim, who led the research and first discovered the nanomaterial in 2004 with Kostya Novoselov, says that the findings suggest that graphene could be used as a base for making entirely new compounds. The hydrogenated compound graphane had been theoretically predicted before, but no one had attempted to create it. "What's important is that you can make another compound of [graphene] and can chemically tune its electronic properties to what you want so easily," Geim says.

Adding hydrogen to graphene is just one possibility. Using other chemicals could yield materials with even more appealing properties, such as a semiconductor. "Hydrogenation may not be the end of the exploration; it may be just the beginning," says Yu-Ming Lin, a nanotechnology researcher at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, in Yorkstown Heights, NY.

The latest findings are a step toward practical carbon-based integrated circuits, which could be used for low-power, ultrafast logic processors of the future. The findings also open up the possibility of using graphene for hydrogen storage in fuel cells. "Graphene is the ultimate surface because it doesn't have any bulk--only two faces," Geim says. This large surface area would make an excellent high-density storage material.

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As described in Science, the researchers make graphane by exposing graphene pieces to hydrogen plasma--a mixture of hydrogen ions and electrons. Hydrogen atoms attach to each carbon atom in graphene, creating the new compound. Heating the piece to 450 °C for 24 hours reverts it back to the original state. Geim says that the researchers did not expect to be able to make the new substance so easily.

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Viv

61 Comments

  • 1107 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2009

A capacitor?

How good an insulator is this new material? can we make capacitors from alternate sheets of this new material and the old one?

Reply

Draq Wraith

9 Comments

  • 1102 Days Ago
  • 02/04/2009

Re: A capacitor?

I wouldn't try using graphene for this. Namely because of the fqact it is a Carbon sheet carbon i have always thought was an great conduit of electricity, then the temperature for this to be used as a hydrogen storage device causes me to think some too. Flash-point temperature of hydrogen is 550 C. So what happens when this materials container starts breaking down and the material it self does too?
It just seems to me like a potentially explosive situation if done wrong or the pack goes bad and super-heats. THink of a heating element failure it is a thermal resistor it can break in two, or super heat and burn right through!

Be careful if you use this method guys and think satfety first, foremost, and always.
D~W

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