TY - JOUR
T1 - Recent advances, properties, fabrication and opportunities in two-dimensional materials for their potential sustainable applications
AU - Hayat, Asif
AU - Sohail, Muhammad
AU - Jery, Atef El
AU - Al-Zaydi, Khadijah M.
AU - Raza, Saleem
AU - Ali, Hamid
AU - Ajmal, Zeeshan
AU - Zada, Amir
AU - Taha, T. A.
AU - Din, Israf Ud
AU - Khan, Moonis Ali
AU - Amin, Mohammed A.
AU - Al-Hadeethi, Yas
AU - Barasheed, Abeer Z.
AU - Orooji, Yasin
AU - Khan, Javid
AU - Ansari, Mohd Zahid
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2023/5
Y1 - 2023/5
N2 - Elemental two-dimensional (2D) materials, characterized by unique chemical, physical, and electrical characteristics, now offer intriguing energy and catalysis application possibilities. Their 2D thin structure has constricting effects due to their large surface-to-volume ratios, good transport features, and fascinating the physicochemical characteristics. Despite the fact, that emerging elemental 2D materials such as graphene, borophene, silicone, black phosphorene, antimonene, tellurene, bismuthene, and arsenene, etc., are receiving significant attention in electronics and optoelectronic devices, as well as multiple energy storage and conversion systems, due to their remarkable structural, and electronic characteristics. Particularly, 2D materials have large surface areas, elevated theoretical capacities, structural anisotropy, excellent mobility, and tunable bandgaps, which are intriguing prospects for a variety of energy storage and conversion techniques. As main group elements such as silicon and germanium have favored the area of contemporary electronics, their monolayer 2D intermediates have shown considerable potential for next-generation electronic metals and potentially game-changing features for optoelectronics, energy, and beyond. Such atomically thin materials have expressed interesting characteristics like near-room-temperature topological insulation in bismuthene, exceptionally elevated electron mobilities in phosphorene and silicone, and significant Li-ion storage capacity in borophene. Recent advancements in the synthesis, analysis and use of several developing 2D materials have been noteworthy. We have demonstrated the basic properties, structure, importance of imperfections and functionalization, explanation of various allotropes, general structure-property correlations, categorization of conjugated polymers, and most recent advancements in the synthesis of 2D materials and their application in various sustainable diversity. In this view, we highlight the advancement of new elemental 2D materials in terms of synthesis techniques, characteristics, synthesis schemes and merit figures in energy production and catalyst purposes. In addition, we contribute our perspective on the problems and possibilities, which we hope will shed light on the enormous prospects of this ever-expanding industry.
AB - Elemental two-dimensional (2D) materials, characterized by unique chemical, physical, and electrical characteristics, now offer intriguing energy and catalysis application possibilities. Their 2D thin structure has constricting effects due to their large surface-to-volume ratios, good transport features, and fascinating the physicochemical characteristics. Despite the fact, that emerging elemental 2D materials such as graphene, borophene, silicone, black phosphorene, antimonene, tellurene, bismuthene, and arsenene, etc., are receiving significant attention in electronics and optoelectronic devices, as well as multiple energy storage and conversion systems, due to their remarkable structural, and electronic characteristics. Particularly, 2D materials have large surface areas, elevated theoretical capacities, structural anisotropy, excellent mobility, and tunable bandgaps, which are intriguing prospects for a variety of energy storage and conversion techniques. As main group elements such as silicon and germanium have favored the area of contemporary electronics, their monolayer 2D intermediates have shown considerable potential for next-generation electronic metals and potentially game-changing features for optoelectronics, energy, and beyond. Such atomically thin materials have expressed interesting characteristics like near-room-temperature topological insulation in bismuthene, exceptionally elevated electron mobilities in phosphorene and silicone, and significant Li-ion storage capacity in borophene. Recent advancements in the synthesis, analysis and use of several developing 2D materials have been noteworthy. We have demonstrated the basic properties, structure, importance of imperfections and functionalization, explanation of various allotropes, general structure-property correlations, categorization of conjugated polymers, and most recent advancements in the synthesis of 2D materials and their application in various sustainable diversity. In this view, we highlight the advancement of new elemental 2D materials in terms of synthesis techniques, characteristics, synthesis schemes and merit figures in energy production and catalyst purposes. In addition, we contribute our perspective on the problems and possibilities, which we hope will shed light on the enormous prospects of this ever-expanding industry.
KW - Crystal allotropes
KW - Properties
KW - Sustainable applications
KW - Synthesis
KW - Two-dimensional materials
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85153567879&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ensm.2023.102780
DO - 10.1016/j.ensm.2023.102780
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85153567879
SN - 2405-8297
VL - 59
JO - Energy Storage Materials
JF - Energy Storage Materials
M1 - 102780
ER -