Greener and Scalable MXene Fabrication Enabled by Supercritical CO₂: A Mini-Review

Abstract

Supercritical CO₂ (scCO₂) has a gas-like diffusivity and a liquid-like density, which speeds up transport and allows for tunable termination chemistry during MXene synthesis. This mini review compares scCO₂-assisted routes to HF and LiF-HCl systems in terms of time to conversion, monolayer yield, oxidation stability, and readiness for scale-up. Optimized scCO₂ protocols show a conversion time of about 0.5 to 3 hours (compared to 12 to 72 hours), a mono/few-layer yield of more than 60%, and better air stability, with kilogram-scale batches presented. We evaluate the effects of pressure, temperature, water activity, and co-solvent polarity, and we demonstrate how RESS blow-down and in-situ spectroscopy can speed up the process. Application snapshots (supercapacitors, Li/Na-ion batteries, HER, EMI) demonstrate consistent improvements due to termination control and diminished restacking. There are still route-specific limits, comprising narrow p-T windows, batch-to-batch termination scatter, and compression/heat duties that set techno-economics. We suggest a reporting checklist that includes PMI, E-factor, specific energy, CO₂ intensity, and water use. We also describe hybrid scCO₂electrochemical/microwave pathways and closed-loop engineering that are needed to connect the promise of lab-scale research with real-world use. When looked at with clear, metrics-based criteria, scCO₂ is a safer, greener, and more scalable way to make MXene.

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
20 Oct 2025
Accepted
19 Dec 2025
First published
23 Dec 2025

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Greener and Scalable MXene Fabrication Enabled by Supercritical CO₂: A Mini-Review

S. G. colak, U. B. Simsek, A. Gungor and M. O. Alas, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA08520A

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