Country for PR: Japan
Contributor: Kyodo News JBN
Monday, March 22 2021 - 18:00
AsiaNet
2D Electronics Could Be One Drop Away: WPI-MANA
TSUKUBA, Japan, Mar. 22, 2021 /Kyodo JBN-AsiaNet/ --

A research team at WPI-MANA has developed a surprisingly simple method for 
fabricating highly organized mono- and multilayers of 2D nanosheets. All one 
needs to do the job is a pipette and a hotplate.

(Image: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M105739/202103122207/_prw_PI1fl_64rYmXCO.jpeg)


Two-dimensional nanosheets have been generating a lot of excitement worldwide 
recently. Their broad range of unique electronic, magnetic, optical and thermal 
properties could find their way into next-generation devices. However, further 
development of 2D materials depends on finding deposition processes that enable 
precise layer-by-layer control of thin films while reducing time, cost and 
energy/sample consumption.

The team found that a simple one-drop approach improves "drop casting" 
fabrication of tiled nanosheets. Drop casting is one of the most versatile and 
cost-effective methods of depositing nanomaterials on solid surfaces. But it 
has serious drawbacks, including the so-called coffee-ring effect, a pattern 
left by particles after the liquid evaporates. 

They found, to their surprise, that controlled convection by a pipette and a 
hotplate causes uniform deposition rather than a ring-like pattern, suggesting 
a new possibility for drop casting. The process is surprisingly simple -- 
dropping a solution containing 2D nanosheets with a simple pipette onto a 
substrate heated on a hotplate, followed by removal of the solution, causes the 
nanosheets to come together in about 30 seconds to form a tile-like layer.

The team also produced various functional coatings such as conducting, 
semiconducting, insulating, magnetic and photochromic coatings in multilayer, 
superlattice and submicrometer-thick forms, which showed the potential for a 
convenient way to produce high-quality 2D nanosheet films. If the process can 
be scaled up, it could advance development of next-generation electronics.

This research was carried out by Minoru Osada (NIMS Invited Researcher, Soft 
Chemistry Group, WPI-MANA, NIMS) and his collaborators.

"Single Droplet Assembly for Two-Dimensional Nanosheet Tiling"
Yue Shi et al., ACS Nano (October 29, 2020)
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.0c05434

MANA E-BULLETIN
https://www.nims.go.jp/mana/ebulletin/


SOURCE: International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA), 
National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS)