The mechanical performance and surface friction of graphene oxide (GO) were found to inversely depend on the number of layers. Here, we demonstrate the non-monotonic layer-dependence of the nanowear resistance… Click to show full abstract
The mechanical performance and surface friction of graphene oxide (GO) were found to inversely depend on the number of layers. Here, we demonstrate the non-monotonic layer-dependence of the nanowear resistance of GO nanosheets deposited on a native silicon oxide substrate. As the thickness of GO increases from ∼0.9 nm to ∼14.5 nm, the nanowear resistance initially demonstrated a decreasing and then an increasing tendency with a critical number of layers of 4 (∼3.6 nm in thickness). This experimental tendency corresponds to a change of the underlying wear mode from the overall removal to progressive layer-by-layer removal. The phenomenon of overall removal disappeared as GO was deposited on an H-DLC substrate with a low surface energy, while the nanowear resistance of thicker GO layers was always higher. Combined with density functional theory calculations, the wear resistance of few-layer GO was found to correlate with the substrate's surface energy. This can be traced back to substrate-dependent adhesive strengths of GO, which correlated with the GO thickness originating from differences in the interfacial charge transfer. Our study proposes a strategy to improve the antiwear properties of 2D layered materials by tuning their own thickness and/or the interfacial interaction with the underlying substrate.
               
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