posted on 2021-01-15, 16:07authored byWan Li, Yunqi Li, Ke Xu
We
report a facile approach to directly chlorinate graphene from
an aqueous sodium chloride solution under ambient conditions. By applying
a moderate anodic voltage to substrate-supported monolayer graphene,
the resultant chlorine radicals generated at the graphene surface
enable efficient chlorination: X-ray photoelectron spectrum confirms
the formation of C–Cl bonds, and reaction voltage-tunable Cl:C
atomic ratios of up to 17% are achieved. In comparison, we find the
corresponding electrochemical graphene bromination and iodination
reactions much less viable. Electrical and Raman characterizations
show substantial p-doping for the chlorinated graphene,
yet good basal-plane integrity and electrical properties are maintained.
Interference reflection microscopy and pH-dependent experiments next
help elucidate the competition between the radical-mediated electrochemical
chlorination and oxidation in the process, and rationalize acidic
conditions for optimal chlorination. Reaction in a mixed NaCl–NaN3 solution shows the electrochemical chlorination to be fully
suppressed by azidation, yet a sequential, two-step chlorination-azidation
approach permits facile bifunctionalization.