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Graphene and germ combo paves way for futuristic tech

Making graphene nanomaterials with bacteria is easier, faster, and cheaper than current methods, and could pave the way for the electronics of the future.
petri dish with bacteria (graphene concept)

Researchers have created a method to produce graphene materials using a novel technique: mixing oxidized graphite with bacteria.

In order to create new and more efficient computers, medical devices, and other advanced technologies, researchers are turning to nanomaterials: materials manipulated on the scale of atoms or molecules that exhibit unique properties.

Graphene—a flake of carbon as thin as a single layer of atoms—is a revolutionary nanomaterial due to its ability to easily conduct electricity, as well as its extraordinary mechanical strength and flexibility. However, a major hurdle in adopting the material for everyday applications is producing it at a large scale, while still retaining its amazing properties.

The new method overcomes this barrier. The method is a more cost-efficient, time-saving, and environmentally friendly way of producing graphene materials versus those produced chemically, and could lead to the creation of innovative computer technologies and medical equipment.

Overcoming issues with graphene

Graphene is extracted from graphite, the material found in an ordinary pencil. At exactly one atom thick, it’s the thinnest—yet strongest—two-dimensional material known to researchers. Scientists from the University of Manchester received the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery of graphene; however, their method of using sticky tape to make graphene yielded only small amounts of the material.

“For real applications you need large amounts,” says Anne S. Meyer, an associate professor of biology at the University of Rochester. “Producing these bulk amounts is challenging and typically results in graphene that is thicker and less pure. This is where our work came in.”

graphene tubes
From left to right: A vial of graphite (Gr), like what you would find in an ordinary pencil; a vial of graphene oxide (GO), produced by exfoliating Gr—shedding the layers of the material—and mixing it with the bacteria Shewanella; a vial of the resulting product—graphene materials (mrGO); and a vial of graphene materials that have been produced chemically (crGO). The graphene materials Anne Meyer’s lab produced are significantly thinner than the graphene materials produced chemically. (Credit: Benjamin Lehner/Delft University of Technology)

In order to produce larger quantities of graphene materials, Meyer and her colleagues at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands started with a vial of graphite. They exfoliated the graphite—shedding the layers of material—to produce graphene oxide (GO), which they then mixed with the bacteria Shewanella. They let the beaker of bacteria and precursor materials sit overnight, during which time the bacteria reduced the GO to a graphene material.

“Graphene oxide is easy to produce, but it is not very conductive due to all of the oxygen groups in it,” Meyer says. “The bacteria remove most of the oxygen groups, which turns it into a conductive material.”

Better material for medicine

While the bacterially-produced graphene material the researchers created in Meyer’s lab is conductive, it is also thinner and more stable than graphene produced chemically. It can additionally be stored for longer periods of time, making it well suited for a variety of applications, including field-effect transistor (FET) biosensors and conducting ink. FET biosensors are devices that detect biological molecules and could be used to perform, for example, real-time glucose monitoring for diabetics.

“When biological molecules bind to the device, they change the conductance of the surface, sending a signal that the molecule is present,” Meyer says. “To make a good FET biosensor you want a material that is highly conductive but can also be modified to bind to specific molecules.”

Graphene oxide that has been reduced is an ideal material because it is lightweight and very conductive, but it typically retains a small number of oxygen groups that can be used to bind to the molecules of interest.

The bacterially produced graphene material could also be the basis for conductive inks, which could, in turn, be used to make faster and more efficient computer keyboards, circuit boards, or small wires such as those used to defrost car windshields. Using conductive inks is an “easier, more economical way to produce electrical circuits, compared to traditional techniques,” Meyer says. Conductive inks could also be used to produce electrical circuits on top of nontraditional materials like fabric or paper.

“Our bacterially produced graphene material will lead to far better suitability for product development,” Meyer says.

“We were even able to develop a technique of ‘bacterial lithography’ to create graphene materials that were only conductive on one side, which can lead to the development of new, advanced nanocomposite materials.”

The paper appears in the journal ChemOpen.

Source: University of Rochester

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