Sublayers Editing of Covalent MAX Phase for Nanolaminated Early Transition Metal Compounds
Ziqian Li, Ke Chen, Xudong Wang, Kan Luo, Lei Lei, Mian Li, Kun Liang,, Degao Wang, Shiyu Du, Zhifang Chai, Qing Huang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method to synthesize nanolaminated early transition metal compounds by selectively modifying covalent MAX phase sublayers, enabling the creation of new 2D materials with tunable properties.
Contribution
It demonstrates a new approach to structurally modify covalent MAX phases, allowing element substitution and transformation into MXene-like and transition metal chalcogenide materials.
Findings
Successfully substituted elements at the X site in covalent MAX phases.
Converted non-metal A site atoms into surface atoms in layered materials.
Produced monolayer TMXCs with tunable oxidation states.
Abstract
Two-dimensional transition metal carbides and nitrides (MXenes) have gained popularity in fields such as energy storage, catalysis, and electromagnetic interference due to their diverse elemental compositions and variable surface terminations (T). Generally, the synthesis of MXene materials involves etching the weak M-A metallic bonds in the ternary layered transition metal carbides and nitrides (MAX phase) using HF acid or Lewis acid molten salts, while the strong M-X covalent bonds preserve the two-dimensional framework structure of MXenes. On the other hand, the MAX phase material family also includes a significant class of members where the A site is occupied by non-metal main group elements (such as sulfur and phosphorus), in which both M-A and M-X are covalent bond-type sublayers. The aforementioned etching methods cannot be used to synthesize MXene materials from these parent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMXene and MAX Phase Materials · Graphene and Nanomaterials Applications · Nanocluster Synthesis and Applications
