Chemical Vapour Deposition Graphene-PMMA Nanolaminates for Flexible Gas Barrier
Antonio Baldanza, Maria Giovanna Pastore Carbone, Cosimo Brondi,, Anastasios C. Manikas, Giuseppe Mensitieri, Christos Pavlou, Giuseppe, Scherillo, Costas Galiotis

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel graphene-PMMA nanolaminate with enhanced mechanical strength and significantly improved gas barrier properties, achieved through a controlled fabrication process, suitable for flexible barrier applications.
Contribution
It introduces a new nanolaminate architecture incorporating CVD graphene into PMMA, demonstrating superior gas barrier performance over traditional composites.
Findings
Enhanced mechanical properties with only 0.06 vol% graphene
Significant reduction in oxygen and CO2 permeability
Non-monotonic permeability response to humidity
Abstract
Successful ways of fully exploiting the excellent structural and multifunctional performance of graphene and related materials are of great scientific and technological interest. New opportunities are provided by the fabrication of a novel class of nanocomposites with a nanolaminate architecture. In this work, by using the iterative lift-off/float-on process combined with wet depositions, we incorporated cm-size graphene monolayers produced via Chemical Vapour Deposition into a poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) matrix with a controlled, alternate-layered structure. The produced nanolaminate shows a significant improvement in mechanical properties, with enhanced stiffness, strength and toughness, with the addition of only 0.06 vol% of graphene. Furthermore, oxygen and carbon dioxide permeability measurements performed at different relative humidity levels, reveal that the addition of…
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