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Extremely Low Density and Super‐Compressible Graphene Cellular Materials
Authors:Ling Qiu  Bing Huang  Zijun He  Yuanyuan Wang  Zhiming Tian  Jefferson Zhe Liu  Kun Wang  Jingchao Song  Thomas R. Gengenbach  Dan Li
Affiliation:1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Monash University, VIC, Australia;2. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Monash University, VIC, Australia;3. Monash Centre for Atomically Thin Materials, Monash University, VIC, Australia;4. Department of Chemical Engineering, Monash University, VIC, Australia;5. CSIRO Manufacturing, Bayview Avenue, Clayton, VIC, Australia
Abstract:Development of extremely low density graphene elastomer (GE) holds the potential to enable new properties that traditional cellular materials cannot offer, which are promising for a range of emerging applications, ranging from flexible electronics to multifunctional scaffolds. However, existing graphene foams with extremely low density are generally found to have very poor mechanical resilience. It is scientifically intriguing but remains unresolved whether and how the density limit of this class of cellular materials can be further pushed down while their mechanical resilience is being retained. In this work, a simple annealing strategy is developed to investigate the role of intersheet interactions in the formation of extreme‐low‐density of graphene‐based cellular materials. It is discovered that the density limit of mechanically resilient cellular GEs can be further pushed down as low as 0.16 mg cm?3 through thermal annealing. The resultant extremely low density GEs reveal a range of unprecedented properties, including complete recovery from 98% compression in both of liquid and air, ultrahigh solvent adsorption capacity, ultrahigh pressure sensitivity, and light transmittance.
Keywords:aerogels  elastomers  extremely low density  graphene  super‐compressible
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