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      Hydroxide‐Derived Nanostructures: Scalable Synthesis, Characterization, Properties, and Potential Applications

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      Advanced Materials
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Metal oxide nanostructures have received an increasing attention owing to their unique chemical and physical properties along with their widespread applications in various fields. This article provides an overview of the recent discovery – christened Hydroxides‐Derived Nanostructures, or HDNs – in which hydroxide aqueous solutions (mostly tetramethylammonium hydroxide, TMAH) are reacted at temperatures < 100 °C and under atmospheric pressure with various metal‐containing precursors to scalably prepare novel metal oxide nanostructures. In one case, a dozen commercial and earth abundant Ti‐containing powders such as binary carbides, nitrides, borides, among others, are converted into new, 1D TiO 2‐based lepidocrocite (1DL) nanofilaments (NFs). Application‐wise, the 1DLs show outstanding performance in a number of energy, environmental, and biomedical fields such as photo‐ and electrocatalysis, water splitting, lithium–sulfur and lithium‐ion batteries, water purification, dye degradation, cancer therapy, and polymer composites. In addition to 1DL, the HDNs family encompasses other metal oxides nanostructures including magnetic Fe 3O 4 nanoparticles and MnO 2 birnessite‐based crystalline 2D flakes. The latter showed promise in electrochemical energy conversion and storage applications. The developed recipe provides a new vista in the molecular self‐assembly synthesis of nanomaterials that can advance the field with a library of novel nanostructures with substantial implications in a multitude of fields.

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          Electric Field Effect in Atomically Thin Carbon Films

          We describe monocrystalline graphitic films, which are a few atoms thick but are nonetheless stable under ambient conditions, metallic, and of remarkably high quality. The films are found to be a two-dimensional semimetal with a tiny overlap between valence and conductance bands, and they exhibit a strong ambipolar electric field effect such that electrons and holes in concentrations up to 10 13 per square centimeter and with room-temperature mobilities of ∼10,000 square centimeters per volt-second can be induced by applying gate voltage.
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            Electrochemical Photolysis of Water at a Semiconductor Electrode

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              Two-dimensional nanocrystals produced by exfoliation of Ti3 AlC2.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Advanced Materials
                Wiley
                0935-9648
                1521-4095
                July 2024
                May 26 2024
                July 2024
                : 36
                : 28
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Material Science and Engineering Drexel University Philadelphia PA 19104 USA
                Article
                10.1002/adma.202402012
                6209dc96-9563-49e0-be91-ddd2ae29e8d4
                © 2024

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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