Melik Demirel and Mauricio Terrones and their colleagues at The Pennsylvania State University recently published a study in the journal Carbon (doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2017.03.053) detailing a novel method for creating a layered graphene-based molecular composite that achieves bulk microstructural order, thus overcoming one of the main obstacles facing two-dimensional (2D) materials utilization. At the heart of their strategy was the ability to tune the spacing between the stacked layers with atomic-level precision, where the resulting composite could be integrated into a highly flexible and efficient thermal actuator.
The combination of strength and high electrical and thermal conductivities of 2D graphene-based materials provides opportunities for engineering materials applications. However, many of these desirable properties are diminished in bulk materials due to a lack of microstructural organization. When precise microstructural control of 2D materials like graphene is achieved in bulk, the extraordinary properties of such materials can be exploited in composites, layered films, and bio-constructs.
With the leaps in performance and efficiency of graphene-based being made in materials like the actuators fabricated by Demirel and Terrones’s team, Demirel predicts that future 2D graphene-based materials will be able to “respond to a variety of external stimuli and self-adapt based on the stimuli, thus laying the foundations for truly smart, robust, self-powered, and autonomous systems.”
The researchers fabricated the novel molecular composite using graphene oxide and an organic matrix that consisted of tandem repeat (TR) proteins inspired by squid ring teeth. The TR protein matrix self-assembled into a layered structure of antiparallel β-sheets, subsequently providing a template of hydrogen bonding locations for graphene oxide with the TR proteins. Each protein layer was only one β-sheet-thick, thus allowing for ideal intercalation with the graphene oxide.
By simply altering the molecular weight of the TR proteins, the researchers showed that the spacing between the stacked layers can be controlled. Interlayer spacing of 0.4 nm, 0.6 nm, and 0.9 nm was reported with three different molecular weights of the same TR protein. This atomistic tunability of 2D layer spacing is a major advantage of using TR proteins in graphene-based molecular composites because it allows for precise materials-property selection.
The team further demonstrated the advantageous properties of the TR protein and graphene oxide molecular composites by fabricating two types of bimorph thermal actuators (devices with two active layers): (1) regular TR protein and graph-ene oxide actuators and (2) molecular composite TR protein and graphene oxide actuators. The regular actuators consisted of a TR protein film and graphene oxide film, while the molecular composite actuators consisted of a TR protein film and the researchers’ new molecular composite film. Gold contacts were sputtered onto each type of actuator to allow for testing.
The bimorph actuators with molecular composites outperformed the regular bimorph actuators with respect to the voltage required to initiate thermal actuation and the curvature achievable for a given power input. Furthermore, increasing the number of TR proteins in the molecular composite extended the range of actuator deformation.
“It is really exciting to see that molecular composites provide energy-efficient actuators,” Demirel says. “By altering the number of repeating units in our nanocomposites, thermal actuation efficiencies reaching 1800% of the efficiency of bulk bimorph thermal actuators can be achieved. This is the beginning of a new era of materials science [merging] synthetic biology with advanced 2D materials.”