Lawrence B. Alemany
Rice University
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Featured researches published by Lawrence B. Alemany.
Nature Chemistry | 2009
Wei Gao; Lawrence B. Alemany; Lijie Ci; Pulickel M. Ajayan
Graphite oxide is one of the main precursors of graphene-based materials, which are highly promising for various technological applications because of their unusual electronic properties. Although epoxy and hydroxyl groups are widely accepted as its main functionalities, the complete structure of graphite oxide has remained elusive. By interpreting spectroscopic data in the context of the major functional groups believed to be present in graphite oxide, we now show evidence for the presence of five- and six-membered-ring lactols. On the basis of this chemical composition, we devised a complete reduction process through chemical conversion by sodium borohydride and sulfuric acid treatment, followed by thermal annealing. Only small amounts of impurities are present in the final product (less than 0.5 wt% of sulfur and nitrogen, compared with about 3 wt% with other chemical reductions). This method is particularly effective in the restoration of the π-conjugated structure, and leads to highly soluble and conductive graphene materials.
Nano Letters | 2012
Juan Peng; Wei Gao; Bipin Kumar Gupta; Zheng Liu; Rebeca Romero-Aburto; Liehui Ge; Li Song; Lawrence B. Alemany; Xiaobo Zhan; Guanhui Gao; Sajna Antony Vithayathil; Benny Abraham Kaipparettu; Angel A. Martí; Takuya Hayashi; Jun Jie Zhu; Pulickel M. Ajayan
Graphene quantum dots (GQDs), which are edge-bound nanometer-size graphene pieces, have fascinating optical and electronic properties. These have been synthesized either by nanolithography or from starting materials such as graphene oxide (GO) by the chemical breakdown of their extended planar structure, both of which are multistep tedious processes. Here, we report that during the acid treatment and chemical exfoliation of traditional pitch-based carbon fibers, that are both cheap and commercially available, the stacked graphitic submicrometer domains of the fibers are easily broken down, leading to the creation of GQDs with different size distribution in scalable amounts. The as-produced GQDs, in the size range of 1-4 nm, show two-dimensional morphology, most of which present zigzag edge structure, and are 1-3 atomic layers thick. The photoluminescence of the GQDs can be tailored through varying the size of the GQDs by changing process parameters. Due to the luminescence stability, nanosecond lifetime, biocompatibility, low toxicity, and high water solubility, these GQDs are demonstrated to be excellent probes for high contrast bioimaging and biosensing applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Ayrat M. Dimiev; Dmitry V. Kosynkin; Lawrence B. Alemany; Pavel Chaguine; James M. Tour
Graphite oxide (GO) is a lamellar substance with an ambiguous structure due to material complexity. Recently published GO-related studies employ only one out of several existing models to interpret the experimental data. Because the models are different, this leads to confusion in understanding the nature of the observed phenomena. Lessening the structural ambiguity would lead to further developments in functionalization and use of GO. Here, we show that the structure and properties of GO depend significantly on the quenching and purification procedures, rather than, as is commonly thought, on the type of graphite used or oxidation protocol. We introduce a new purification protocol that produces a product that we refer to as pristine GO (pGO) in contrast to the commonly known material that we will refer to as conventional GO (cGO). We explain the differences between pGO and cGO by transformations caused by reaction with water. We produce ultraviolet-visible spectroscopic, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic, solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic, thermogravimetric, and scanning electron microscopic analytical evidence for the structure of pGO. This work provides a new explanation for the acidity of GO solutions and allows us to add critical details to existing GO models.
ACS Nano | 2012
Bostjan Genorio; Wei Lu; Ayrat M. Dimiev; Yu Zhu; Abdul-Rahman O. Raji; Barbara Novosel; Lawrence B. Alemany; James M. Tour
A cost-effective and potentially industrially scalable, in situ functionalization procedure for preparation of soluble graphene nanoribbon (GNRs) from commercially available carbon nanotubes is presented. The physical characteristics of the functionalized product were determined using SEM, evolved gas analysis, X-ray diffraction, solid-state (13)C NMR, Raman spectroscopy, and GC-MS analytical techniques. A relatively high preservation of electrical properties in the bulk material was observed. Moreover, replacement of intercalated potassium with haloalkanes was obtained. While carbon nanotubes can be covalently functionalized, the conversion of the sp(2)-hybridized carbon atoms to sp(3)-hybridized atoms dramatically lowers their conductivity, but edge functionalized GNRs permit their heavy functionalization while leaving the basal planes intact.
Journal of Biomaterials Science-polymer Edition | 1997
Susan J. Peter; Michael J. Yaszemski; Laura J. Suggs; Richard G. Payne; Robert Langer; Wilson C. Hayes; Marilyn R. Unroe; Lawrence B. Alemany; Paul S. Engel; Antonios G. Mikos
A partially saturated linear polyester based on poly(propylene fumarate) (PPF) was synthesized for potential application in filling skeletal defects. The synthesis was carried out according to a two-step reaction scheme. Propylene glycol and fumaryl chloride were first combined to form an intermediate fumaric diester. The intermediate was then subjected to a transesterification to form the PPF-based polymer. This method allowed for production of a polymer with a number average molecular weight up to 1500 and a polydispersity index of 2.8 and below. The polymeric backbone structure was investigated through the use of FTIR and NMR. Kinetic studies of the transesterification allowed mapping of the molecular weight increase with reaction time. The final product was also characterized by thermal and solubility analysis.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Zhiqiang Yang; Yanqiu Sun; Lawrence B. Alemany; Tharangattu N. Narayanan; W. E. Billups
The Birch reduction (lithium in liquid ammonia) of graphite gives a highly reduced, exfoliated product that is free of lithium. Edge and interior hydrogenation were demonstrated by solid-state (13)C NMR spectroscopy. Elemental analysis of a carefully purified sample allows the chemical composition to be expressed as (C(1.3)H)(n). Atomic force microscopy images showed that the reduced graphene was highly exfoliated. Hydrogen mapping by electron energy loss spectroscopy showed that the entire surface of the reduced sample was covered by hydrogen, consistent with the NMR studies also indicating that hydrogen was added in interior positions of the graphene lattice as well as along the edge. A large band gap (4 eV) further establishes the high level of hydrogenation.
ACS Nano | 2012
Pinn-Tsong Chiang; Johannes Mielke; Jazmin Godoy; Jason M. Guerrero; Lawrence B. Alemany; Carlos J. Villagómez; Alex Saywell; Leonhard Grill; James M. Tour
A second generation motorized nanocar was designed, synthesized, and imaged. To verify structural integrity, NMR-based COSY, NOESY, DEPT, HSQC, and HMBC experiments were conducted on the intermediate motor. All signals in (1)H NMR were unambiguously assigned, and the results were consistent with the helical structure of the motor. The nanocar was deposited on a Cu(111) surface, and single intact molecules were imaged by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) at 5.7 K, thereby paving the way for future single-molecule studies of this motorized nanocar atop planar substrates.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Ram P. Garg; Xuelei L. Qian; Lawrence B. Alemany; Sean D. Moran; Ronald J. Parry
The antibiotic valanimycin is a naturally occurring azoxy compound produced by Streptomyces viridifaciens MG456-hF10. Precursor incorporation experiments showed that valanimycin is derived from l-valine and l-serine via the intermediacy of isobutylamine and isobutylhydroxylamine. Enzymatic and genetic investigations led to the cloning and sequencing of the valanimycin biosynthetic gene cluster, which was found to contain 14 genes. A novel feature of the valanimycin biosynthetic gene cluster is the presence of a gene (vlmL) that encodes a class II seryl-tRNA synthetase. Previous studies suggested that the role of this enzyme is to provide seryl-tRNA for the valanimycin biosynthetic pathway. Here, we report the results of investigations to elucidate the role of seryl-tRNA in valanimycin biosynthesis. A combination of enzymatic and chemical studies has revealed that the VlmA protein encoded by the valanimycin biosynthetic gene cluster catalyzes the transfer of the seryl residue from seryl-tRNA to the hydroxyl group of isobutylhydroxylamine to produce the ester O-seryl-isobutylhydroxylamine. These findings provide an example of the involvement of an aminoacyl-tRNA in an antibiotic biosynthetic pathway.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Ruquan Ye; Zhiwei Peng; Andrew Metzger; Jian Lin; Jason A. Mann; Kewei Huang; Changsheng Xiang; Xiujun Fan; Errol L. G. Samuel; Lawrence B. Alemany; Angel A. Martí; James M. Tour
Bandgaps of photoluminescent graphene quantum dots (GQDs) synthesized from anthracite have been engineered by controlling the size of GQDs in two ways: either chemical oxidative treatment and separation by cross-flow ultrafiltration, or by a facile one-step chemical synthesis using successively higher temperatures to render smaller GQDs. Using these methods, GQDs were synthesized with tailored sizes and bandgaps. The GQDs emit light from blue-green (2.9 eV) to orange-red (2.05 eV), depending on size, functionalities and defects. These findings provide a deeper insight into the nature of coal-derived GQDs and demonstrate a scalable method for production of GQDs with the desired bandgaps.
European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2001
Jamie Nossal; Rajesh K. Saini; Lawrence B. Alemany; Mark S. Meier; W. E. Billups
The syntheses and characterization of fullerene hydrides prepared from C60 and C70 are reviewed. Methods of isolation and characterization are discussed, particularly MS and NMR, including 3He nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The higher hydrides are discussed in terms of novel structural features and their unusual spectroscopic properties.