Griffith Kent J, Hope Michael A, Reeves Philip J, Anayee Mark, Gogotsi Yury, Grey Clare P
Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1EW, United Kingdom.
Department of Chemistry and Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, United States.
J Am Chem Soc. 2020 Nov 4;142(44):18924-18935. doi: 10.1021/jacs.0c09044. Epub 2020 Oct 23.
MXenes, derived from layered MAX phases, are a class of two-dimensional materials with emerging applications in energy storage, electronics, catalysis, and other fields due to their high surface areas, metallic conductivity, biocompatibility, and attractive optoelectronic properties. MXene properties are heavily influenced by their surface chemistry, but a detailed understanding of the surface functionalization is still lacking. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is sensitive to the interfacial chemistry, the phase purity including the presence of amorphous/nanocrystalline phases, and the electronic properties of the MXene and MAX phases. In this work, we systematically study the chemistry of Nb MAX and MXene phases, NbAlC, NbAlC, NbCT, and NbCT, with their unique electronic and mechanical properties, using solid-state NMR spectroscopy to examine a variety of nuclei (H, C, F, Al, and Nb) with a range of one- and two-dimensional correlation, wide-line, high-sensitivity, high-resolution, and/or relaxation-filtered experiments. Hydroxide and fluoride terminations are identified, found to be intimately mixed, and their chemical shifts are compared with other MXenes. This multinuclear NMR study demonstrates that diffraction alone is insufficient to characterize the phase composition of MAX and MXene samples as numerous amorphous or nanocrystalline phases are identified including NbC, AlO species, aluminum nitride or oxycarbide, AlF·HO, Nb metal, and unreacted MAX phase. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to examine the transition-metal resonances directly in MXene samples, and the first Nb NMR of any MAX phase. The insights from this work are employed to enable the previously elusive assignment of the complex overlapping Ti NMR spectrum of TiAlC. The results and methodology presented here provide fundamental insights on MAX and MXene phases and can be used to obtain a more complete picture of MAX and MXene chemistry, to prepare realistic structure models for computational screening, and to guide the analysis of property measurements.
MXenes源自层状MAX相,是一类二维材料,因其高比表面积、金属导电性、生物相容性和吸引人的光电特性,在能量存储、电子学、催化及其他领域有着新兴应用。MXene的性能在很大程度上受其表面化学影响,但对其表面功能化仍缺乏详细了解。固态核磁共振(NMR)光谱对界面化学、包括非晶/纳米晶相存在的相纯度以及MXene和MAX相的电子特性敏感。在这项工作中,我们利用固态NMR光谱,通过一系列一维和二维相关、宽线、高灵敏度、高分辨率和/或弛豫滤波实验,系统地研究了具有独特电子和机械性能的Nb MAX和MXene相,即NbAlC、NbAlC、NbCT和NbCT的化学性质。确定了氢氧化物和氟化物终端,发现它们紧密混合,并将其化学位移与其他MXenes进行了比较。这项多核NMR研究表明,仅靠衍射不足以表征MAX和MXene样品的相组成,因为鉴定出了许多非晶或纳米晶相,包括NbC、AlO物种、氮化铝或碳氧化物、AlF·HO、Nb金属和未反应的MAX相。据我们所知,这是第一项直接在MXene样品中检测过渡金属共振的研究,也是任何MAX相的首次Nb NMR研究。这项工作的见解被用于实现此前难以捉摸的TiAlC复杂重叠Ti NMR光谱的归属。这里展示的结果和方法为MAX和MXene相提供了基本见解,可用于获得更完整的MAX和MXene化学图景,为计算筛选准备实际结构模型,并指导性能测量分析。