Abstract
Abstract
Graphitic nanoplatelets (GNPs) have been treated using an ultrasonicated ozonolysis procedure to produce stable aqueous dispersions that facilitate deposition of thin films using electrophoretic deposition. The thin GNP films were then coated with zero valence (ZV) iron nanocubes using a pulsed electrodeposition technique. Characterization of the ZV-iron coating with deposition time revealed that the changing magnetic character of the ferromagnetic-graphitic hybrid material was related to the nucleation density and growth of the ZV-iron nanocubes. Density functional theory calculations show a preference for ZV-iron adsorption at the oxygen sites of the GNPs, with ZV-iron displacement of oxygen groups favored in some configurations. Transmission electron microscopy studies confirm ZV-iron growth nucleates preferentially at the graphite nanoplatelet edges and the hybrid material magnetism is affected by the convergent crystalline grain boundaries formed between adjacent ZV-iron nanocubes.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science,General Chemistry,Bioengineering