Litcius/Paper detail

Enhancing Metallicity and Basal Plane Reactivity of 2D Materials via Self-Intercalation

Stefano Americo, Sahar Pakdel, Kristian S. Thygesen

2024ACS Nano17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Intercalation (ic) of metal atoms into the van der Waals (vdW) gap of layered materials constitutes a facile strategy to create materials whose properties can be tuned via the concentration of the intercalated atoms. Here we perform systematic density functional theory calculations to explore various properties of an emergent class of crystalline 2D materials (ic-2D materials) comprising vdW homobilayers with native metal atoms on a sublattice of intercalation sites. From an initial set of 1348 ic-2D materials, generated from 77 vdW homobilayers, we find 95 structures with good thermodynamic stability (formation energy within 200 meV/atom of the convex hull). A significant fraction of the semiconducting host materials are found to undergo an insulator to metal transition upon self-intercalation, with only PdS 2, PdSe 2, and GeS 2 maintaining a finite electronic gap. In five cases, self-intercalation introduces magnetism. In general, self-intercalation is found to promote metallicity and enhance the chemical reactivity on the basal plane. Based on the calculated H binding energy, we find that self-intercalated SnS 2 and Hf 3 Te 2 are promising candidates for hydrogen evolution catalysis. All the stable ic-2D structures and their calculated properties can be explored in the open C2DB database.

Topics & Concepts

Intercalation (chemistry)van der Waals forceDensity functional theoryMaterials scienceReactivity (psychology)Chemical physicsAtom (system on chip)Basal planeCrystallographyNanotechnologyComputational chemistryChemistryMoleculeInorganic chemistryOrganic chemistryEmbedded systemAlternative medicineComputer sciencePathologyMedicine2D Materials and ApplicationsMXene and MAX Phase MaterialsGraphene research and applications