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2-D Materials

Scientists synthesize large borophene crystals

A new method could help researchers bring the material closer to applications

by Sam Lemonick
November 4, 2021 | A version of this story appeared in Volume 99, Issue 41

 

Scanning tunneling microscopy image of borophene deposited on a metal surface. The left side of the image shows the borophene, looking like wavy stripes in shades of orange and yellow. It is overlaid by a honeycomb pattern that represents the protective hexagonal boron nitride. The right side of the image shows a drawing of hexagonal boron nitride to match that grid, and red zigzag lines to match the borophene.
Credit: Marc González Cuxart
A micrograph of borophene with a protective layer of hexagonal boron nitride on top of it. The red lines trace the pattern of the borophene crystal, and the structure of hexagonal boron nitride is overlaid as red and green spheres.

Scientists have stumbled on a new way to make borophene that lets them make large sheets of the 2D material and protect it from degradation (Sci. Adv. 2021, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abk1490). While exploring chemical vapor deposition (CVD)—in which a vapor condenses on a surface to make a 2D material—using borazine (B3H6N3) to make boron nitride in its hexagonal crystal form (hBN), researchers discovered their B3H6N3 supply was contaminated with diborane. Marc González Cuxart and Willi Auwärter of the Technical University of Munich and Hermann Sachdev, most recently of Bundeswehr University Munich, realized that CVD of diborane would make borophene.

Calculations have shown that borophene, which was first synthesized in 2015, should have properties comparable to graphene that could make it useful in batteries and other devices. But researchers have been able to make crystals only tens of nanometers wide. The researchers were able to use CVD to make sheets of borophene about 1 µm wide.

“The demonstration of large single-crystalline domains is an important step towards realizing the potential of borophene,” Mark Hersam of Northwestern University says. He was part of one of the first groups to make borophene. The study authors say producing larger amounts of borophene for potential applications is one advantage of the method and add that larger crystals will also enable others to test some of the material’s predicted properties.

In addition to making borophene, the CVD technique lets the team make layers of hBN. Because boron reacts readily with a number of elements, borophene can quickly degrade when exposed to air. But hBN is much more inert. The researchers developed a system to deposit borophene on iridium and copper surfaces, followed by a layer of hBN. The hBN protected the borophene from oxidation in tests with molecular oxygen.

One limitation of the method is that it requires deposition in a very clean environment, so the researchers performed their syntheses at less than about 100 nPa of pressure.

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