| Literature DB >> 26763313 |
Yakun Chen1, Xiang Zhang1, Enzuo Liu1,2, Chunnian He1,2, Chunsheng Shi1, Jiajun Li1, Philip Nash3, Naiqin Zhao1,2.
Abstract
al">Graphene/Cu composites were fabricated through a <span class="Chemical">graphene in-situ grown approach, which involved ball-milling of Cu powders with PMMA as solid carbon source, in-situ growth of graphene on flaky Cu powders and vacuum hot-press sintering. SEM and TEM characterization results indicated that graphene in-situ grown on Cu powders guaranteed a homogeneous dispersion and a good combination between graphene and Cu matrix, as well as the intact structure of graphene, which was beneficial to its strengthening effect. The yield strength of 244 MPa and tensile strength of 274 MPa were achieved in the composite with 0.95 wt.% graphene, which were separately 177% and 27.4% enhancement over pure Cu. Strengthening effect of in-situ grown graphene in the matrix was contributed to load transfer and dislocation strengthening.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26763313 PMCID: PMC4725871 DOI: 10.1038/srep19363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the fabrication procedures to fabricate graphene/Cu composites.
(a) Original Cu powders and PMMA. (b) Flaky Cu powders loaded with PMMA after ball-milling. (c) Graphene/Cu composite powders. (d) Bulk graphene/Cu composite after hot-press sintering.
Figure 2(a) SEM image of original pure Cu powders. (b) Flaky PMMA/Cu powders; SEM micrographs of triturated PMMA dispersed on the surface of (c) PMMA /Cu-1, (d) PMMA /Cu-2, and (e) PMMA /Cu-3, correspondingly.
Figure 3SEM morphologies of (a) graphene/Cu-1, (b) graphene/Cu-2 and (c) graphene/Cu-3, respectively; TEM morphologies of (d) graphene/Cu-1, (e) graphene/Cu-2 and (f) graphene/Cu-3, respectively. (g) XRD patterns of graphene/Cu-1, graphene/Cu-2 and graphene/Cu-3. (h) Raman spectrums of graphene/Cu-1, graphene/Cu-2 and graphene/Cu-3.
Figure 4(a) HRTEM image of in-situ grown graphene and its interlayer space. (b) An AFM image and section analysis of in-situ grown graphene absorbed on freshly cleaved mica.
Figure 5Fracture surfaces of (a) graphene/Cu-1, (b) graphene/Cu-2 and (c)graphene/Cu-3, correspondingly.
Mechanical properties of pure Cu and different graphene/Cu composites.
| Materials | Graphene content (wt.%) | HV | YS (MPa) | σUTS(MPa) | εf |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pure Cu | 0 | 123 | 52 | 215 | 0.40 |
| Graphene/Cu-1 | 0.4 | 131 | 103 | 251 | 0.44 |
| Graphene/Cu-2 | 0.95 | 143 | 144 | 274 | 0.39 |
| Graphene/Cu-3 | — | 135 | 98 | 238 | 0.37 |
Figure 6Stress–strain curves of pure Cu and different graphene/Cu composites.
Figure 7(a) TEM morphology of interface between graphene and Cu matrix in graphene/Cu-2 composite. (b) Dislocation strengthening effect of graphene within graphene/Cu-2 composite. (c) Schematic diagram of a sectional view of graphene/Cu in the fracture process.