Login / Signup

Thermal dynamics of few-layer-graphene seals.

Hjalte Rørbech AmbjørnerAnton Simon BjørnlundTobias Georg BonczykEdwin DollekampLau Morten KaasSofie Colding-FagerholtKristian Speranza MølhaveChristian Danvad DamsgaardStig HelvegPeter Christian Kjærgaard Vesborg
Published in: Nanoscale (2023)
Being of atomic thickness, graphene is the thinnest imaginable membrane. While graphene's basal plane is highly impermeable at the molecular level, the impermeability is, in practice, compromised by leakage pathways located at the graphene-substrate interface. Here, we provide a kinetic analysis of such interface-mediated leakage by probing gas trapped in graphene-sealed SiO 2 cavities versus time and temperature using electron energy loss spectroscopy. The results show that gas leakage exhibits an Arrhenius-type temperature dependency with apparent activation energies between 0.2 and 0.7 eV. Surprisingly, the interface leak rate can be improved by several orders of magnitude by thermal processing, which alters the kinetic parameters of the temperature dependency. The present study thus provides fundamental insight into the leakage mechanism while simultaneously demonstrating thermal processing as a generic approach for tightening graphene-based-seals with applications within chemistry and biology.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • carbon nanotubes
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • healthcare
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance
  • ionic liquid
  • amino acid
  • structural basis