Wavy graphene sheets from electrochemical sewing of corannulene.
Carlo BrunoEleonora UssanoGianni BaruccaDavide VanossiGiovanni ValentiEdward A JacksonAndrea GoldoniLucio LittiSimona FermaniLuca PasqualiMoreno MeneghettiFontanesi ClaudioEmeritus Lawrence T ScottFrancesco PaolucciMassimo MarcaccioPublished in: Chemical science (2021)
The presence of non-hexagonal rings in the honeycomb carbon arrangement of graphene produces rippled graphene layers with valuable chemical and physical properties. In principle, a bottom-up approach to introducing distortion from planarity of a graphene sheet can be achieved by careful insertion of curved polyaromatic hydrocarbons during the growth of the lattice. Corannulene, the archetype of such non-planar polyaromatic hydrocarbons, can act as an ideal wrinkling motif in 2D carbon nanostructures. Herein we report an electrochemical bottom-up method to obtain egg-box shaped nanographene structures through a polycondensation of corannulene that produces a new conducting layered material. Characterization of this new polymeric material by electrochemistry, spectroscopy, electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), scanning probe microscopy, and laser desorption-ionization time of flight mass spectrometry provides strong evidence that the anodic polymerization of corannulene, combined with electrochemically induced oxidative cyclodehydrogenations (Scholl reactions), leads to polycorannulene with a wavy graphene-like structure.
Keyphrases
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