A critical bottleneck for the widespread use of single layer graphene is the absence of a facile method of chemical modification which does not diminish the outstanding properties of the two-dimensional sp(2) network. Here, we report on the direct chemical modification of graphene by photopolymerization with styrene. We demonstrate that photopolymerization occurs at existing defect sites and that there is no detectable disruption of the basal plane conjugation of graphene. This method thus offers a route to define graphene functionality without degrading its electronic properties. Furthermore, we show that photopolymerization with styrene results in self-organized intercalative growth and delamination of few layer graphene. Under these reaction conditions, we find that a range of other vinyl monomers exhibits no reactivity with graphene. However, we demonstrate an alternative route by which the surface reactivity can be precisely tuned, and these monomers can be locally grafted via electron-beam-induced carbon deposition on the graphene surface.
We present the first example of a surface-initiated group transfer polymerization (SI-GTP) mediated by rare earth metal catalysts for polymer brush synthesis. The experimentally facile method allows rapid grafting of polymer brushes with a thickness of >150 nm in <5 min at room temperature. We show the preparation of common poly(methacrylate) brushes and demonstrate that SI-GTP is a versatile route for the preparation of novel polymer brushes. The method gives access to both thermoresponsive and proton-conducting brush layers.
Exhibiting a combination of exceptional structural and electronic properties, graphene has a great potential for the development of highly sensitive sensors. To date, many challenging chemical, biochemical, and biologic sensing tasks have been realized based on graphene. However, many of these sensors are rather unspecific. To overcome this problem, for instance, the sensor surface can be modified with analyte-specific transducers such as enzymes. One problem associated with the covalent attachment of such biomolecular systems is the introduction of crystal defects that have a deleterious impact on the electronic properties of the sensor. In this work, we present a versatile platform for biosensing applications based on polymer-modified CVD-grown graphene transistors. The functionalization method of graphene presented here allows one to integrate several functional groups within surface-bound polymer brushes without the introduction of additional defects. To demonstrate the potential of this polymer brush functionalization scaffold, we modified solution-gated graphene field-effect transistors with the enzyme acetylcholinesterase and a transducing group, allowing the detection of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Taking advantage of the transducing capability of graphene transistors and the versatility of polymer chemistry and enzyme biochemistry, this study presents a novel route for the fabrication of highly sensitive, multipurpose transistor sensors that can find application for a multitude of biologically relevant analytes.
We demonstrate that the degree of hydrogenation of graphene directly controls the grafting density and thus, the layer thickness of grafted polymer brushes synthesized via self-initiated photografting and photopolymerization. Among the tested monomers, only styrene derivatives could be directly grafted onto copper-supported graphene. Therefore, copolymerization of styrene and acrylates, as well as consecutive grafting of both monomer types, was employed to realize functional polymer brushes of poly(styrene-co-acrylate) copolymers. The direct grafting of polymers on graphene results in polymer carpets that are suitable for a wide variety of applications.
The straightforward synthesis of a series of poly(thioether)s by photoinduced thiol-ene click polyaddition of α,ω-alkylene thiols is reported. It is found that linear and telechelic poly(thioether)s can be directly obtained from α,ω-alkylene thiols with, for example, alkyl chain length of m = 1,2,3, and 9. The reaction proceeds without additives such as (radical) initiators or metal compounds and can simply be carried out by UV-irradiation of the bulk monomer or monomer solution. Ex situ kinetic studies reveal that the reaction proceeds by a typical a step-growth polyaddition mechanism. As the homologue series of poly(thioether)s are now synthetically accessible, new direct pathways to tailored poly(alkyl sulphoxide)s and poly(alkyl sulfone)s are now possible.
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