Recent Advances in Two-Dimensional Materials beyond Graphene

Ganesh R. Bhimanapati(Pennsylvania State University), Zhong Lin(Pennsylvania State University), Vincent Meunier(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Yeonwoong Jung(University of Central Florida), Judy Cha(Yale University), Saptarshi Das(Purdue University West Lafayette), Di Xiao(Carnegie Mellon University), Young‐Woo Son(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Michael S. Strano(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Valentino R. Cooper(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Liangbo Liang(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Steven G. Louie(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Emilie Ringe(Rice University), Wu Zhou(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Steve Kim(UES (United States)), Rajesh R. Naik, Bobby G. Sumpter(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Humberto Terrones(Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute), Fengnian Xia(Yale University), Yeliang Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jun Zhu(Pennsylvania State University), Deji Akinwande(The University of Texas at Austin), Nasim Alem(Pennsylvania State University), Jon A. Schuller(University of California, Santa Barbara), Raymond E. Schaak(Pennsylvania State University), Mauricio Terrones(Pennsylvania State University), Joshua A. Robinson(Pennsylvania State University)
ACS Nano
November 6, 2015
Cited by 2,614Open Access
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Abstract

The isolation of graphene in 2004 from graphite was a defining moment for the "birth" of a field: two-dimensional (2D) materials. In recent years, there has been a rapidly increasing number of papers focusing on non-graphene layered materials, including transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), because of the new properties and applications that emerge upon 2D confinement. Here, we review significant recent advances and important new developments in 2D materials "beyond graphene". We provide insight into the theoretical modeling and understanding of the van der Waals (vdW) forces that hold together the 2D layers in bulk solids, as well as their excitonic properties and growth morphologies. Additionally, we highlight recent breakthroughs in TMD synthesis and characterization and discuss the newest families of 2D materials, including monoelement 2D materials (i.e., silicene, phosphorene, etc.) and transition metal carbide- and carbon nitride-based MXenes. We then discuss the doping and functionalization of 2D materials beyond graphene that enable device applications, followed by advances in electronic, optoelectronic, and magnetic devices and theory. Finally, we provide perspectives on the future of 2D materials beyond graphene.


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