| Literature DB >> 27135862 |
Suchithra Padmajan Sasikala1, Lucile Henry1, Gulen Yesilbag Tonga2, Kai Huang3, Riddha Das2, Baptiste Giroire1, Samuel Marre1, Vincent M Rotello2, Alain Penicaud3, Philippe Poulin3, Cyril Aymonier1.
Abstract
This paper rationalizes the green and scalable synthesis of graphenic materials of different aspect ratios using anthracite coal as a single source material under different supercritical environments. Single layer, monodisperse graphene oxide quantum dots (GQDs) are obtained at high yield (55 wt %) from anthracite coal in supercritical water. The obtained GQDs are ∼3 nm in lateral size and display a high fluorescence quantum yield of 28%. They show high cell viability and are readily used for imaging cancer cells. In an analogous experiment, high aspect ratio graphenic materials with ribbon-like morphology (GRs) are synthesized from the same source material in supercritical ethanol at a yield of 6.4 wt %. A thin film of GRs with 68% transparency shows a surface resistance of 9.3 kΩ/sq. This is apparently the demonstration of anthracite coal as a source for electrically conductive graphenic materials.Entities:
Keywords: bioimaging; coal; conductive graphenic ribbons; emissive graphene oxide quantum dots; supercritical fluids
Year: 2016 PMID: 27135862 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b01298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881