32 research outputs found
Degradation behaviors and mechanisms of MoS2 crystals relevant to bioabsorbable electronics
Monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) exhibits unique semiconducting and bioresorption properties, giving this material enormous potential for electronic/biomedical applications, such as bioabsorbable electronics. In this regard, understanding the degradation performance of monolayer MoS2 in biofluids allows modulation of the properties and lifetime of related bioabsorbable devices and systems. Herein, the degradation behaviors and mechanisms of monolayer MoS2 crystals with different misorientation angles are explored. High-angle grain boundaries (HAGBs) biodegrade faster than low-angle grain boundaries (LAGBs), exhibiting degraded edges with wedge and zigzag shapes, respectively. Triangular pits that formed in the degraded grains have orientations opposite to those of the parent crystals, and these pits grow into larger pits laterally. These behaviors indicate that the degradation is induced and propagated based on intrinsic defects, such as grain boundaries and point defects, because of their high chemical reactivity due to lattice breakage and the formation of dangling bonds. High densities of dislocations and point defects lead to high chemical reactivity and faster degradation. The structural cause of MoS2 degradation is studied, and a feasible approach to study changes in the properties and lifetime of MoS2 by controlling the defect type and density is presented. The results can thus be used to promote the widespread use of two-dimensional materials in bioabsorption applications
Catalytic subsurface etching of nanoscale channels in graphite
Catalytic hydrogenation of graphite has recently attracted renewed attention,
as a route for nano-patterning of graphene and to produce graphene
nano-ribbons. These reports show that metallic nanoparticles etch surface
layers of graphite, or graphene anisotropically along the crystallographic
zigzag or armchair directions. On graphene the etching direction
can be influenced by external magnetic fields or the substrate. Here we report
the sub-surface etching of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) by Ni
nanoparticles, to form a network of tunnels, as seen by SEM and STM. In this
new nanoporous form of graphite, the top layers bend inward on top of the
tunnels, while their local density of states remains fundamentally unchanged.
Engineered nanoporous tunnel networks in graphite allow further chemical
modification and may find applications in storage or sensing