Single-Molecule Water Motion on h-BN and Graphene: A Paradigm Shift in Understanding the Behaviour of Water on 2D Material Interfaces
Philipp Seiler, Anthony Payne, Neubi F. Xavier Jr, Louie Slocombe, Marco Sacchi, Anton Tamt\"ogl

TL;DR
This study reveals that water molecules exhibit distinct rotational and translational dynamics on h-BN compared to graphene, with substrate effects significantly influencing water mobility, challenging existing models of water behavior on 2D materials.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of single-molecule water motion on h-BN and graphene, highlighting the influence of substrate and material polarity on water dynamics.
Findings
Water on h-BN rotates freely around its center of mass.
Activation energy for water diffusion on h-BN is 2.5 times lower than on graphene.
Substrate significantly affects water friction, with h-BN/Ni showing lower friction than graphene/Ni.
Abstract
Understanding water behaviour on 2D materials is crucial for sensing, microfluidics, and tribology. While water/graphene interactions are well studied, water on hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) remains largely unexplored. Despite structural similarity to graphene, h-BN's slightly polar B-N bonds impart a large band gap, high thermal conductivity, and chemical stability, making it promising for electronics, lubricants, and coatings. Moreover, existing water studies often focus on multilayer water dynamics, overlooking single-molecular details. We bridge this gap by studying single-molecular water friction and diffusion on h-BN, comparing it with graphene using helium spin-echo experiments and ab initio calculations. Our findings show that water diffusion on h-BN/Ni follows a complex rotational-translational dynamic, unlike graphene. While conventional views treat water motion as discrete…
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