Litcius/Paper detail

Pristine Titanium Carbide MXene Hydrogel Matrix

Hongwu Chen, Hongyun Ma, Panpan Zhang, Yeye Wen, Liangti Qu, Chun Li

2020ACS Nano120 citationsDOI

Abstract

The hydrogel matrix normally forms via covalent or noncovalent interactions that make the matrix resistant to hydration and disassembly. Herein this type of chemical transition is demonstrated in titanium carbide MXene (Ti3C2Tx), in which the exchange of intercalated Li+ with hydrated protons triggers significantly suppressed hydration in stacked Ti3C2Tx. Based on this intercalation chemistry behavior, pristine Ti3C2Tx hydrogel matrices with an arbitrary microstructures are fabricated by freezing-induced preassembly and a subsequent specially designed thawing process in protic acids. The absence of extrinsic components maximizes the materials performance of the resultant pristine Ti3C2Tx hydrogel, which produces a compressive modulus of 2.4 MPa and conductivity of 220.3 ± 16.8 S/m at 5 wt % solid content. The anisotropic Ti3C2Tx hydrogel also delivers a promising performance in solar steam generation by facilitating rapid water transport inside vertical microchannels.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceIntercalation (chemistry)Titanium carbideMXenesChemical engineeringMicrostructureModulusMatrix (chemical analysis)Self-healingTitaniumNanotechnologySelf-healing hydrogelsCarbideComposite materialPolymer chemistryChemistryOrganic chemistryMetallurgyAlternative medicinePathologyEngineeringMedicineMXene and MAX Phase MaterialsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsMicro and Nano Robotics
Pristine Titanium Carbide MXene Hydrogel Matrix | Litcius