Fibrillation of Pristine 2D Materials by 2D-Confined Electrolytes

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Abstract

2D materials are solid microscopic flakes with a-few-Angstrom thickness possessing some of the largest surface-to-volume ratios known. Altering their conformation state from a flat flake to a scroll or fiber offers a synergistic association of properties arising from 2D and 1D nanomaterials. However, a combination of the long-range electrostatic and short-range solvation forces produces an interlayer repulsion that has to be overcome, making scrolling 2D materials without disrupting the pristine structure a challenging task. Herein, a facile method is presented to alter the 2D materials’ inter-layer interactions by confining organic salts onto their basal area, forming 2D-confined electrolytes. The confined electrolytes produce local charge inhomogeneities, which can conjugate across the interlayer gap, binding the two surfaces. This allows the 2D-confined electrolytes to behave as polyelectrolytes within a higher dimensional order (2D → 1D) and form robust nanofibers with distinct electronic properties. The method is not material-specific and the resulting fibers are tightly bound even though the crystal structure of the basal plane remains unaltered.

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Tan, H. L., Donato, K. Z., Costa, M. C. F., Carvalho, A., Trushin, M., Ng, P. R., … Neto, A. H. C. (2024). Fibrillation of Pristine 2D Materials by 2D-Confined Electrolytes. Advanced Functional Materials, 34(29). https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202315038

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