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Dive into the research topics where Si Zhou is active.

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Featured researches published by Si Zhou.


Nature Materials | 2012

Room-temperature metastability of multilayer graphene oxide films.

Suenne Kim; Si Zhou; Yike Hu; Muge Acik; Yves J. Chabal; Claire Berger; Walt A. de Heer; Angelo Bongiorno; Elisa Riedo

Graphene oxide potentially has multiple applications. The chemistry of graphene oxide and its response to external stimuli such as temperature and light are not well understood and only approximately controlled. This understanding is crucial to enable future applications of this material. Here, a combined experimental and density functional theory study shows that multilayer graphene oxide produced by oxidizing epitaxial graphene through the Hummers method is a metastable material whose structure and chemistry evolve at room temperature with a characteristic relaxation time of about one month. At the quasi-equilibrium, graphene oxide reaches a nearly stable reduced O/C ratio, and exhibits a structure deprived of epoxide groups and enriched in hydroxyl groups. Our calculations show that the structural and chemical changes are driven by the availability of hydrogen in the oxidized graphitic sheets, which favours the reduction of epoxide groups and the formation of water molecules.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Origin of the Chemical and Kinetic Stability of Graphene Oxide

Si Zhou; Angelo Bongiorno

At moderate temperatures (≤ 70°C), thermal reduction of graphene oxide is inefficient and after its synthesis the material enters in a metastable state. Here, first-principles and statistical calculations are used to investigate both the low-temperature processes leading to decomposition of graphene oxide and the role of ageing on the structure and stability of this material. Our study shows that the key factor underlying the stability of graphene oxide is the tendency of the oxygen functionalities to agglomerate and form highly oxidized domains surrounded by areas of pristine graphene. Within the agglomerates of functional groups, the primary decomposition reactions are hindered by both geometrical and energetic factors. The number of reacting sites is reduced by the occurrence of local order in the oxidized domains, and due to the close packing of the oxygen functionalities, the decomposition reactions become – on average – endothermic by more than 0.6 eV.


Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2014

Film Structure of Epitaxial Graphene Oxide on SiC: Insight on the Relationship between Interlayer Spacing, Water Content, and Intralayer Structure

Si Zhou; Suenne Kim; E. Di Gennaro; Y. Hu; Cheng Gong; Xi Lu; Claire Berger; W. A. de Heer; Elisa Riedo; Yves J. Chabal; C. Aruta; Angelo Bongiorno

Chemical oxidation of multilayer graphene grown on silicon carbide yields films exhibiting reproducible characteristics, lateral uniformity, smoothness over large areas, and manageable chemical complexity, thereby opening opportunities to accelerate both fundamental understanding and technological applications of this form of graphene oxide films. Here, we investigate the vertical inter-layer structure of these ultra-thin oxide films. X-ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy, and IR experiments show that the multilayer films exhibit excellent inter-layer registry, little amount (<10%) of intercalated water, and unexpectedly large interlayer separations of about 9.35 A. Density functional theory calculations show that the apparent contradiction of “little water but large interlayer spacing in the graphene oxide films” can be explained by considering a multilayer film formed by carbon layers presenting, at the nanoscale, a non-homogenous oxidation, where non-oxidized and highly oxidized nano-domains coexist and where a few water molecules trapped between oxidized regions of the stacked layers are sufficient to account for the observed large inter-layer separations. This work sheds light on both the vertical and intra-layer structure of graphene oxide films grown on silicon carbide, and more in general, it provides novel insight on the relationship between inter-layer spacing, water content, and structure of graphene/graphite oxide materials.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Chemical bonding and stability of multilayer graphene oxide layers

Cheng Gong; Suenne Kim; Si Zhou; Yike Hu; Muge Acik; Walt A. de Heer; Claire Berger; Angelo Bongiorno; Eliso Riedo; Yves J. Chabal

The chemistry of graphene oxide (GO) and its response to external stimuli such as temperature and light are not well understood and only approximately controlled. This understanding is however crucial to enable future applications of the material that typically are subject to environmental conditions. The nature of the initial GO is also highly dependent on the preparation and the form of the initial carbon material. Here, we consider both standard GO made from oxidizing graphite and layered GO made from oxidizing epitaxial graphene on SiC, and examine their evolution under different stimuli. The effect of the solvent on the thermal evolution of standard GO in vacuum is first investigated. In situ infrared absorption measurements clearly show that the nature of the last solvent in contact with GO prior to deposition on a substrate for vacuum annealing studies substantially affect the chemical evolution of the material as GO is reduced. Second, the stability of GO derived from epitaxial graphene (on SiC) is examined as a function of time. We show that hydrogen, in the form of CH, is present after the Hummers process, and that hydrogen favors the reduction of epoxide groups and the formation of water molecules. Importantly, this transformation can take place at room temperature, albeit slowly (~ one month). Finally, the chemical interaction (e.g. bonding) between GO layers in multilayer samples is examined with diffraction (XRD) methods, spectroscopic (IR, XPS, Raman) techniques, imaging (APF) and first principles modeling.


Nature Materials | 2015

Elastic coupling between layers in two-dimensional materials

Yang Gao; Suenne Kim; Si Zhou; Hsiang Chih Chiu; Daniel Nelias; Claire Berger; Walt A. de Heer; Laura Polloni; Roman Sordan; Angelo Bongiorno; Elisa Riedo


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Large Negative Thermal Expansion and Anomalous Behavior on Compression in Cubic ReO3-Type AIIBIVF6: CaZrF6 and CaHfF6

Justin C. Hancock; Karena W. Chapman; Gregory J. Halder; Cody R. Morelock; Benjamin S. Kaplan; Leighanne C. Gallington; Angelo Bongiorno; Chu Han; Si Zhou; Angus P. Wilkinson


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Chemical Bonding of Partially Fluorinated Graphene

Si Zhou; Sonam D. Sherpa; Dennis W. Hess; Angelo Bongiorno


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2014

Density functional theory modeling of multilayer "epitaxial" graphene oxide.

Si Zhou; Angelo Bongiorno


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013

Chemical Structure of Oxidized Multilayer Epitaxial Graphene: A Density Functional Theory Study

Si Zhou; Suenne Kim; Angelo Bongiorno


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

A-Site Cation Substitutions in Strained Y-Doped BaZrO3 Multilayer Films Leading to Fast Proton Transport Pathways

C. Aruta; Chu Han; Si Zhou; Claudia Cantoni; Nan Yang; A. Tebano; Tien-Lin Lee; Christoph Schlueter; Angelo Bongiorno

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Angelo Bongiorno

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Suenne Kim

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Claire Berger

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Elisa Riedo

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Walt A. de Heer

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Yves J. Chabal

University of Texas at Dallas

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Cheng Gong

University of Texas at Dallas

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W. A. de Heer

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Y. Hu

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Yang Gao

Georgia Institute of Technology

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