Ultrathin 2D-oxides: a perspective on fabrication, structure, defect, transport, electron and phonon properties
Santosh Kumar Radha, Kyle Crowley, Brian A. Holler, Xuan P. A. Gao,, Walter R. L. Lambrecht, Halyna Volkova, Marie-H\'el\`ene Berger, Emily, Pentzer, Kevin Pachuta, Alp Sehirlioglu

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in the understanding of ultrathin 2D oxide materials, focusing on their fabrication, structure, defects, and electronic and phononic properties, highlighting their potential in nanoscale devices.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive perspective on the fundamental properties, fabrication methods, and electronic behavior of 2D oxides, including theoretical and experimental insights into their unique features.
Findings
Structural stability of 2D oxide nanoflakes analyzed
Electronic structure studied with GW method and electron-hole interactions
Potential for 2D electron gas and topological properties on surfaces
Abstract
In the field of atomically thin 2D materials, oxides are relatively unexplored in spite of the large number of layered oxide structures amenable to exfoliation. There is an increasing interest in ultra-thin film oxide nanostructures from applied points of view. In this perspective paper, recent progress in understanding the fundamental properties of 2D oxides is discussed. Two families of 2D oxides are considered: (1) van der Waals bonded layered materials in which the transition metal is in its highest valence state (represented by VO and MoO) and (2) layered materials with ionic bonding between positive alkali cation layers and negatively charged transition metal oxide layers (LiCoO). The chemical exfoliation process and its combinaton with mechanical exfoliation are presented for the latter. Structural phase stability of the resulting nanoflakes, the role of cation…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
