Inert Liquid Exfoliation and Langmuir-Type Thin Film Deposition of Semimetallic Metal Diborides
Citation:
Synnatschke, K. and Mÿller, A. and Gabbett, C. and Mohn, M.J. and Kelly, A.G. and Mosina, K. and Wu, B. and Caffrey, E. and Cassidy, O. and Backes, C. and Sofer, Z. and Kaiser, U. and Coleman, J.N., Inert Liquid Exfoliation and Langmuir-Type Thin Film Deposition of Semimetallic Metal Diborides, ACS Nano, 18, 42, 2024, 28596-28608Download Item:
Abstract:
aphite is one of only a few layered materials
that can be exfoliated into nanosheets with semimetallic
properties, which limits the applications of nanosheet-based
electrodes to material combinations compatible with the work
function of graphene. It is therefore important to identify
additional metallic or semimetallic two-dimensional (2D)
nanomaterials that can be processed in solution for scalable
fabrication of printed electronic devices. Metal diborides
represent a family of layered non-van der Waals crystals with
semimetallic properties for all nanosheet thicknesses. While
previous reports show that the exfoliated nanomaterial is prone
to oxidation, we demonstrate a readily accessible inert
exfoliation process to produce quasi-2D nanoplatelets with
intrinsic material properties. For this purpose, we demonstrate the exfoliation of three representative metal diborides (MgB2,
CrB2, and ZrB2) under inert conditions. Nanomaterial is characterized using a combination of transmission electron
microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, IR, and UV−vis measurements, with only minimal
oxidation indicated postprocessing. By depositing the pristine metal diboride nanoplatelets as thin films using a Langmuir-type
deposition technique, the ohmic behavior of the networks is validated. Furthermore, the material decomposition is studied by
using a combination of electrical and optical measurements after controlled exposure to ambient conditions. Finally, we report
an efficient, low-cost approach for sample encapsulation to protect the nanomaterials from oxidation. This is used to
demonstrate low-gauge factor strain sensors, confirming metal diboride nanosheets as a suitable alternative to graphene for
electrode materials in printed electronics.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/colemaj
Author: Coleman, Jonathan
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
ACS Nano;18;
42;
Availability:
Full text availableDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c04626Metadata
Show full item recordThe following license files are associated with this item: