Introduction to ‘Chemistry of 2D materials: graphene and beyond’

Paolo Samorì *a, Xinliang Feng b and Vincenzo Palermo cd
aISIS, University of Strasbourg & CNRS, France. E-mail: samori@unistra.fr
bTU-Dresden, Germany
cCNR-ISOF Bologna, Italy
dChalmers University of Technology, Sweden

The isolation and in-depth investigations on the fundamental physical and chemical properties of 2-dimensional (2D) materials like graphene have undoubtedly represented a cornerstone in materials sciences and nano-science. The unprecedented electrical, mechanical, thermal, optical, electrochemical and catalytic properties of 2D materials, often coexisting in a single material, have triggered a major scientific revolution with unparalleled efforts devoted towards their syntheses, functionalization and processing. The ultimate goal is to exploit 2D materials in a multitude of disruptive technologies, in particular to address the challenges our society is nowadays facing. Soon after the pioneering works of Geim and Novoselov on mechanically exfoliated graphene, the scientific interest branched out to both graphene produced using other top-down and bottom-up approaches, and to other 2D materials which exhibited diverse properties. For example, alongside the atomically thick semimetal graphene, mechanically robust and chemically stable 2D dielectrics (h-BN), semiconductors (unipolar such as black phosphorous and MoS2, and ambipolar like WSe2) and superconductors (NbSe2) could be generated. MXenes (metal carbides and nitrides) represent another robust class of emerging 2D materials with notable electronic and electrochemical properties which can be achieved by the top-down delamination of the bulk MAX phase. While the properties of pristine 2D materials are undoubtedly outstanding, they are hardly tuneable. In this regard, the chemical approach via their covalent and non-covalent functionalizations open numerous opportunities as a powerful route to modulate their physical and chemical properties. It simplifies their processing, in particular in liquid media, and it enables to realize hierarchical composites and hybrid structures which not only combine “the best of two worlds” but also enable the emergence of new characteristics which are absent in the components themselves. More recently, chemical approaches to 2D materials expanded beyond the simple grafting of molecules to pre-existing nanosheets, achieving also the synthetic 2D covalent organic frameworks and 2D metal organic frameworks as bottom-up grown crystalline monolayers with chemical compositions and structures at will. This represented another compelling way to develop atomically thick materials with properties on-demand.

This themed issue on ‘Chemistry of 2D materials: graphene and beyond’ is focussed on the controlled functionalization of 2D materials in order to harness their fundamental properties and enhanced performance in applications in the fields of opto-electronics, energy, catalysis, biomedicine and sensing. It highlights some of the most enlightening approaches on the production of 2D materials (e.g. via electrochemical exfoliation), their processing, printing and manipulation, their covalent and supramolecular functionalization, and their application for energy generation and storage (supercapacitors and batteries), water filtration, optoelectronics, and biosensing.

This themed issue provides clear evidence of the interdisciplinary nature of the chemistry of 2D materials, interesting not only for the fundamental understanding on the modulable properties that can be achieved via a chemical approach, but also for its immense potential for technological breakthroughs. We hope the readers will find these contributions inspiring.

We are most grateful to all contributing authors for their effort in highlighting and addressing the key questions in this highly dynamic interdisciplinary field of nanoscience where the chemical approach, at its interface with physics and engineering, offers a notable step forward.


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Paolo Samorì is distinguished professor and director of the Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS) at the Université de Strasbourg (France). His research interests include nanochemistry, supramolecular sciences, materials chemistry, and scanning probe microscopies with a specific focus on graphene and other 2D materials as well as functional organic/polymeric and hybrid nanomaterials for application in optoelectronics, energy and sensing. He is an associate editor of Nanoscale and Nanoscale Advances (Royal Society of Chemistry). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), Fellow of the European Academy of Sciences (EURASC), Member of the Academia Europaea, Foreign Member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts (KVAB) and Senior Member of the Institut Universitaire de France (IUF).


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Xinliang Feng is a full professor and the head of the Chair of Molecular Functional Materials at Technische Universität Dresden. His current scientific interests include bottom-up synthesis and top-down fabrication of graphene and graphene nanoribbons, 2D polymers and supramolecular polymers, 2D carbon-rich conjugated polymers for opto-electronic applications, new materials for energy storage and conversion, new energy devices and technologies.


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Vincenzo Palermo is vice-director of the Graphene Flagship, one of the largest research projects ever launched in Europe. He is a research director of the National Research Council (CNR, Italy) and professor of Chalmers University of Technology (Sweden). He has published >160 scientific articles in international journals in chemistry and materials science, collaborating with key industrial partners in Europe (Airbus, FCA, Leonardo, BASF, Nokia, STMicroelectronics etc.). He won the Lecturer Award for Excellence of the Federation of European Materials Societies (FEMS), the Research Award of the Italian Society of Chemistry (SCI) and the Science dissemination awards of the Italian Book Association.


This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020