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Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments

Graphene oxide (GO) has a catalytic effect on the thermal decomposition of energetic materials above the melting point. To further enhance the catalytic activity of GO, it has been functionalized with the high nitrogen ligand triaminoguanidine (TAG). However, theoretical studies on the reactivity of...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Chongmin, Fu, Xiaolong, Yan, Qilong, Li, Jizhen, Fan, Xuezhong, Zhang, Guofang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9073275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35529140
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra04187g
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author Zhang, Chongmin
Fu, Xiaolong
Yan, Qilong
Li, Jizhen
Fan, Xuezhong
Zhang, Guofang
author_facet Zhang, Chongmin
Fu, Xiaolong
Yan, Qilong
Li, Jizhen
Fan, Xuezhong
Zhang, Guofang
author_sort Zhang, Chongmin
collection PubMed
description Graphene oxide (GO) has a catalytic effect on the thermal decomposition of energetic materials above the melting point. To further enhance the catalytic activity of GO, it has been functionalized with the high nitrogen ligand triaminoguanidine (TAG). However, theoretical studies on the reactivity of functionalized GO (e.g., GO-TAG) have not been carried out. Therefore, the thermal decomposition of each TAG, GO and GO-TAG is studied by molecular dynamic simulations using a reactive force-field (ReaxFF) with experimental verification, and the results are reported herein. The results show that the GO nanolayer has a tendency to aggregate into a large carbon cluster during its degradation. The main decomposition products of TAG are NH(3), N(2) and H(2). For GO-TAG, the main decomposition products are H(2)O, NH(3), N(2) and H(2). GO has a significant acceleration effect on the decomposition process of TAG by decreasing the decomposition temperature of TAG. This phenomenon is in agreement with the experimental results. The initial decomposition of TAG is mainly caused by hydrogen transfer in the molecule. The edge carbon atoms of GO promote the decomposition of TAG molecules and reduce the decomposition activation energy of TAG by 15.4 kJ mol(−1). Therefore, TAG will quickly decompose due to the catalytic effect of GO. This process produces a “new” GO that catalyzes the decomposition of components such as TAG. At the same time, many free radicals (HN(2), H(2)N and free H) are generated during the decomposition of TAG to catalyze the decomposition of other components, which in turn, enhance the catalytic capability of GO.
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spelling pubmed-90732752022-05-06 Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments Zhang, Chongmin Fu, Xiaolong Yan, Qilong Li, Jizhen Fan, Xuezhong Zhang, Guofang RSC Adv Chemistry Graphene oxide (GO) has a catalytic effect on the thermal decomposition of energetic materials above the melting point. To further enhance the catalytic activity of GO, it has been functionalized with the high nitrogen ligand triaminoguanidine (TAG). However, theoretical studies on the reactivity of functionalized GO (e.g., GO-TAG) have not been carried out. Therefore, the thermal decomposition of each TAG, GO and GO-TAG is studied by molecular dynamic simulations using a reactive force-field (ReaxFF) with experimental verification, and the results are reported herein. The results show that the GO nanolayer has a tendency to aggregate into a large carbon cluster during its degradation. The main decomposition products of TAG are NH(3), N(2) and H(2). For GO-TAG, the main decomposition products are H(2)O, NH(3), N(2) and H(2). GO has a significant acceleration effect on the decomposition process of TAG by decreasing the decomposition temperature of TAG. This phenomenon is in agreement with the experimental results. The initial decomposition of TAG is mainly caused by hydrogen transfer in the molecule. The edge carbon atoms of GO promote the decomposition of TAG molecules and reduce the decomposition activation energy of TAG by 15.4 kJ mol(−1). Therefore, TAG will quickly decompose due to the catalytic effect of GO. This process produces a “new” GO that catalyzes the decomposition of components such as TAG. At the same time, many free radicals (HN(2), H(2)N and free H) are generated during the decomposition of TAG to catalyze the decomposition of other components, which in turn, enhance the catalytic capability of GO. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-10-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9073275/ /pubmed/35529140 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra04187g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Zhang, Chongmin
Fu, Xiaolong
Yan, Qilong
Li, Jizhen
Fan, Xuezhong
Zhang, Guofang
Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
title Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
title_full Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
title_fullStr Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
title_full_unstemmed Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
title_short Study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (GO-TAG) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
title_sort study on the thermal decomposition mechanism of graphene oxide functionalized with triaminoguanidine (go-tag) by molecular reactive dynamics and experiments
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9073275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35529140
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra04187g
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