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2D Materials

University_of_Michigan_Law_School_090920A
[University of Michigan Law School]

  

- Overview

2D materials are crystalline solids that consist of a single layer of atoms. They are also known as single-layer materials. 2D materials have unique properties, including: 
  • High resistance to fire and chemicals
  • High optical transparency
  • Electrical conductivity
  • Flexibility
  • Mechanical strength
 
Some examples of 2D materials include: 
  • Graphene: The first 2D material discovered, graphene is made up of a single plane of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal honeycomb lattice.
  • Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs): These materials have extraordinary electrical and physical properties and are considered promising for use in next-generation electrical devices.
  • MXenes: A class of two-dimensional inorganic compounds that consist of atomically thin layers of transition metal carbides, nitrides, or carbonitrides.
  • 2D layered oxide and hydroxide: Exfoliation of layered compounds has attracted enormous attention and exposed novel properties due to the lateral quantum confinement effect.
 
2D materials are promising for some applications but remain the focus of research.
 
 

- Graphene Science and Technology

There is another reason why graphene is of special interest to fundamental science: it is the first and simplest example of a two-dimensional crystal—that is, a solid material that contains just a single layer of atoms arranged in an ordered pattern. 

Two-dimensional systems (surfaces, membranes, and interfaces) are of huge interest not only for physics and chemistry but also for biology and other natural sciences. (For example, cell membranes, which are crucially important for life, are essentially made up of sheets of lipid molecules with embedded proteins.) 

In many respects, two-dimensional systems are fundamentally different from three-dimensional systems. In particular, due to very strong thermal fluctuations of atomic positions that remain correlated at large distances, long-range crystalline order cannot exist in two dimensions. Instead, only short-range order exists, and it does so only on some finite scale of characteristic length—a caveat that should be noted when graphene is called a two-dimensional “crystal.” 

For this reason, two-dimensional systems are inherently “flexural,” manifesting strong bending fluctuations, so that they cannot be flat and are always rippled or corrugated. Graphene, because of its relative simplicity, can be considered as a model system for studying two-dimensional physics and chemistry in general. 

Other two-dimensional crystals besides graphene can be derived by exfoliation from other multilayer crystals (e.g., hexagonal boron nitride, molybdenum disulfide, or tungsten disulfide) or by chemical modification of graphene (e.g., graphane, hydrogenated graphene, or fluorinated graphene). 

Modern electronics (e.g., integrated circuits in computer chips) are basically two-dimensional in that they use mainly the surface of semiconducting materials. Therefore, graphene and other two-dimensional materials are considered very promising for many such applications. Using graphene, for example, it should be possible to make transistors and other electronic devices that are much thinner than devices made of traditional materials. Many other applications have been proposed. 

For example, graphene, being electrically conducting, transparent, strong, and flexible, may be a prospective material for use in touch screens. Graphene also has very high thermal conductivity and, therefore, could be used to remove heat from electronic circuits. Being very strong mechanically, it could be used as a scaffold for studying biological molecules and materials.

 

[More to come ...]

 

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