16.3 Synthesis of Graphene
Analogous to all other nanomaterial synthesis procedures, graphene can also be syn
thesized by top-down and bottom-up approaches. The synthetic approaches adopted for
the synthesis of graphene are schematically represented in Figure 16.2. The top-down
synthetic strategy involves breaking down the starting materials into graphene layers and
is a destructive technique.
The major top-down approaches adopted for the synthesis of graphene include ex
foliation of graphite and graphite derivatives creating nano-sized graphene sheets [4].
Other top-down approaches adopted for the synthesis of graphene are mechanical ex
foliation, liquid-phase exfoliation, arc discharge, oxidative exfoliation, reduction, and
unhooking of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) [25–27]. Top-down approaches were adopted for
the synthesis of graphene isolates and split the graphite layers into single, bi-, tri-, and
multilayers of graphene. The major disadvantages encountered in the top-down synthetic
strategy are its poor yields and uneven properties, which are related to the quality of the
precursors adopted during the synthesis.
Another synthetic method is known as the bottom-up technique, which customs atomic-
sized carbon precursor rather than graphite to nurture graphene and its derivatives and is
regarded as the construction technique of graphene synthesis. In the bottom-up method,
the assembly of graphene was produced from minor carbonaceous materials. Graphene can
be generally synthesized utilizing numerous bottom-up methods, namely, chemical vapor
deposition (CVD) substrate-free gas-phase synthesis (SFGP), epitaxial growth, template
route, and total organic synthesis [28]. The advantages of the bottom-up technique over
the top-down approach include the production of uniform and perfect graphene layers
possessing a high surface area. Bottom-up synthetic methods were relatively expensive
compared to the top-down approach.
Diverse materials can be employed as precursors towards the synthesis of graphene,
with variable gradations of success. Solid forms are the widely studied and conventional
precursors used for the synthesis of graphene, but liquid and gas precursors were also
found to be effective. The ideal precursors suitable for the synthesis of graphene were
found to be renewable resources but these materials should be systematically estimated,
and the environmental impacts connected with the renewable resource should be thor
oughly investigated. The precursors chosen can be of various types, ranging from con
ventional precursors to advanced starting materials such as carbon nanotubes. Figure 16.3
describes the potential precursors adopted for the synthesis of graphene.
FIGURE 16.2
Schematic representation of the synthetic approaches adopted for graphene.
Source: (Reproduced from Nanotechnology Reviews 2020; 9: 1284–1314: licensed under creative commons attri
bution 4.0).
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