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New, stable 2-D materials

By R&D Editors | August 20, 2015

The team created devices to stabilize 2-D materials. Image: Univ. of ManchesterDozens of new 2-D materials similar to graphene are now available, thanks to research from Univ. of Manchester scientists.

These 2-D crystals are capable of delivering designer materials with revolutionary new properties.

The problem has been that the vast majority of these atomically thin 2-D crystals are unstable in air, so react and decompose before their properties can be determined and their potential applications investigated.

Writing in NanoLetters, the Univ. of Manchester team demonstrate how tailored fabrication methods can make these previously inaccessible materials useful.

By protecting the new reactive crystals with more stable 2-D materials, such as graphene, via computer control in a specially designed inert gas chamber environments, these materials can be successfully isolated to a single atomic layer for the first time.

Combining a range of 2-D materials in thin stacks give scientists the opportunity to control the properties of the materials, which can allow “materials-to-order” to meet the demands of industry.

High-frequency electronics for satellite communications, and lightweight batteries for mobile energy storage are just two of the application areas that could benefit from this research. The breakthrough could allow for many more atomically thin materials to be studied separately as well as serve as building blocks for multilayer devices with such tailored properties.

The team, led by Dr. Roman Gorbachev, used their unique fabrication method on two particular 2-D crystals that have generated intense scientific interest in the past 12 months but are unstable in air: black phosphorus and niobium diselenide.

The technique the team have pioneered allows the unique characteristics and excellent electronic properties of these air-sensitive 2-D crystals to be revealed for the first time.

The isolation of graphene in 2004 by a Univ. of Manchester team lead by Sir Andre Geim and Sir Kostya Novoselov led to the discovery of a range of 2-D materials, each with specific properties and qualities.

Dr. Gorbachev said: “This is an important breakthrough in the area of 2-D materials research, as it allows us to dramatically increase the variety of materials that we can experiment with using our expanding 2-D crystal toolbox.

“The more materials we have to play with, the greater potential there is for creating applications that could revolutionize the way we live.” Sir Andre Geim added.

Source: Univ. of Manchester

• CONFERENCE AGENDA ANNOUNCED:

The highly-anticipated educational tracks for the 2015 R&D 100 Awards & Technology Conference feature 28 sessions, plus keynote speakers Dean Kamen and Oak Ridge National Laboratory Director Thom Mason.  Learn more.

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