Issue 3, 2024

Chemical exfoliation of 1-dimensional antiferromagnetic nanoribbons from a non-van der Waals material

Abstract

As the demand for increasingly varied types of 1-dimensional (1D) materials grows, there is a greater need for new methods to synthesize these types of materials in a simple and scalable way. Chemical exfoliation is commonly used to make 2-dimensional (2D) materials, often in a way that is both straightforward and suitable for making larger quantities, yet this method has thus far been underutilized for synthesizing 1D materials. In the few instances when chemical exfoliation has been used to make 1D materials, the starting compound has been a van der Waals material, thus excluding any structures without these weak bonds inherently present. We demonstrate here that ionically bonded crystals can also be chemically exfoliated to 1D structures by choosing KFeS2 as an example. Using chemical exfoliation, antiferromagnetic 1D nanoribbons can be yielded in a single step. The nanoribbons are crystalline and closely resemble the parent compound both in structure and in intrinsic antiferromagnetism. The facile chemical exfoliation of an ionically bonded crystal shown in this work opens up opportunities for the synthesis of both magnetic and non-magnetic 1D nanomaterials from a greater variety of starting structures.

Graphical abstract: Chemical exfoliation of 1-dimensional antiferromagnetic nanoribbons from a non-van der Waals material

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
18 Sept. 2023
Accepted
17 Janv. 2024
First published
18 Janv. 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Horiz., 2024,9, 479-486

Chemical exfoliation of 1-dimensional antiferromagnetic nanoribbons from a non-van der Waals material

M. Yang, G. Cheng, N. Mathur, R. Singha, F. Yuan, N. Yao and L. M. Schoop, Nanoscale Horiz., 2024, 9, 479 DOI: 10.1039/D3NH00408B

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