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Graphene Analogues of BN: Novel Synthesis and Properties

Enthused by the fascinating properties of graphene, we have prepared graphene analogues of BN by a chemical method with a control on the number of layers. The method involves the reaction of boric acid with urea, wherein the relative proportions of the two have been varied over a wide range. Synthes...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ACS nano 2010-03, Vol.4 (3), p.1539-1544
Main Authors: Nag, Angshuman, Raidongia, Kalyan, Hembram, Kailash P. S. S, Datta, Ranjan, Waghmare, Umesh V, Rao, C. N. R
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Enthused by the fascinating properties of graphene, we have prepared graphene analogues of BN by a chemical method with a control on the number of layers. The method involves the reaction of boric acid with urea, wherein the relative proportions of the two have been varied over a wide range. Synthesis with a high proportion of urea yields a product with a majority of 1−4 layers. The surface area of BN increases progressively with the decreasing number of layers, and the high surface area BN exhibits high CO2 adsorption, but negligible H2 adsorption. Few-layer BN has been solubilized by interaction with Lewis bases. We have used first-principles simulations to determine structure, phonon dispersion, and elastic properties of BN with planar honeycomb lattice-based n-layer forms. We find that the mechanical stability of BN with respect to out-of-plane deformation is quite different from that of graphene, as evident in the dispersion of their flexural modes. BN is softer than graphene and exhibits signatures of long-range ionic interactions in its optical phonons. Finally, structures with different stacking sequences of BN have comparable energies, suggesting relative abundance of slip faults, stacking faults, and structural inhomogeneities in multilayer BN.
ISSN:1936-0851
1936-086X
DOI:10.1021/nn9018762