Impulsive Hydrodynamic Exfoliation into Monolayer Graphene and Nanofragments by Transonic Flow Focusing

Abstract

We propose using Transonic Flow Focusing (TFF) to produce 2D and 0D nanomaterials. This technique focuses liquid suspensions into high-speed micrometer-scale jets, combining extremely high shear and elongational stresses in a confined, contact-free zone. For the Graphene Nanoplatelets suspensions and TFF operating conditions investigated here, the process promoted exfoliation without added surfactants or oxidative chemistry. Both graphene monolayer flakes ( 300-400 nm in lateral size) and monolayer graphene nanofragments with lateral sizes compatible with quantum dots ( 10-15 nm) were obtained in a single TFF step using isopropanol and pure water. Our theoretical analysis reveals that, during microsecond residence times at the meniscus-jet transition, shear and extensional stresses of the order of 106 s-1 act on the suspended particles, yielding viscous power densities of the order of 1010 W/m3. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy show that the monolayer fraction exceeded 99\% for isopropanol and 92.9\% for water. These results suggest that TFF can combine solvent versatility with a high monolayer fraction in a purely mechanical top-down process.

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