Sounds good except this is the beginning. Work on Graphene has now been underway for around fifteen years and it has actually gone well.
I am more encouraged to see that we are clearly expanding to other elements to achieve similar breakthroughs. Some day we will be able to code an atom so that it will connect to a specific atom on a working substrate. Turn that now into any such atom.
It will take directed coding and we are still a long way away..
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Sorry, graphene—borophene is the new wonder material that’s got everyone excited
Stronger and more flexible than graphene, a single-atom layer of boron could revolutionize sensors, batteries, and catalytic chemistry.
by Emerging Technology from the arXiv
April 5, 2019
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/613267/borophene-the-new-2d-material-taking-chemistry-by-storm/
Not so long ago, graphene was the
great new wonder material. A super-strong, atom-thick sheet of carbon
“chicken wire,” it can form tubes, balls, and other curious shapes. And
because it conducts electricity, materials scientists raised the
prospect of a new era of graphene-based computer processing and a
lucrative graphene chip industry to boot. The European Union invested €1
billion to kick-start a graphene industry.
This brave new graphene-based world has yet to materialize. But it
has triggered an interest in other two-dimensional materials. And the
most exciting of all is borophene: a single layer of boron atoms that
form various crystalline structures.
The reason for the excitement is the extraordinary range of applications that borophene looks good for. Electrochemists think borophene could become the anode material in a new generation of more powerful lithium-ion batteries. Chemists are entranced by its catalytic capabilities. And physicists are testing its abilities as a sensor to detect numerous kinds of atoms and molecules.
The reason for the excitement is the extraordinary range of applications that borophene looks good for. Electrochemists think borophene could become the anode material in a new generation of more powerful lithium-ion batteries. Chemists are entranced by its catalytic capabilities. And physicists are testing its abilities as a sensor to detect numerous kinds of atoms and molecules.
Today, Zhi-Qiang Wang at Xiamen University in China and a number of
colleagues review the remarkable properties of borophene and the
applications they might lead to.
Borophene has a short history. Physicists first predicted its
existence in the 1990s using computer simulations to show how boron
atoms could form a monolayer.
But this exotic substance wasn’t synthesized until 2015, using
chemical vapor deposition. This is a process in which a hot gas of boron
atoms condenses onto a cool surface of pure silver.
The regular arrangement of silver atoms forces boron atoms into a
similar pattern, each binding to as many as six other atoms to create a
flat hexagonal structure. However, a significant proportion of boron
atoms bind only with four or five other atoms, and this creates
vacancies in the structure. The pattern of vacancies is what gives
borophene crystals their unique properties.
Since borophene’s synthesis, chemists have been eagerly
characterizing its properties. Borophene turns out to be stronger than
graphene, and more flexible. It a good conductor of both electricity and
heat, and it also superconducts. These properties vary depending on the
material’s orientation and the arrangement of vacancies. This makes it
“tunable,” at least in principle. That’s one reason chemists are so
excited.
Borophene is also light and fairly reactive. That makes it a good
candidate for storing metal ions in batteries. “Borophene is a promising
anode material for Li, Na, and Mg ion batteries due to high theoretical
specific capacities, excellent electronic conductivity and outstanding
ion transport properties,” say Wang and co.
Hydrogen atoms also stick easily to borophene’s single-layer
structure, and this adsorption property, combined with the huge surface
area of atomic layers, makes borophene a promising material for hydrogen
storage. Theoretical studies suggest borophene could store over 15% of
its weight in hydrogen, significantly outperforming other materials.
Then there is borophene’s ability to catalyze the breakdown of
molecular hydrogen into hydrogen ions, and water into hydrogen and
oxygen ions. “Outstanding catalytic performances of borophene have been
found in hydrogen evolution reaction, oxygen reduction reaction, oxygen
evolution reaction, and CO2 electroreduction reaction,” say the team. That could usher in a new era of water-based energy cycles.
Nevertheless, chemists have some work to do before borophene can be
more widely used. For a start, they have yet to find a way to make
borophene in large quantities. And the material’s reactivity means it is
vulnerable to oxidation, so it needs to be carefully protected. Both
factors make borophene expensive to make and hard to handle. So there is
work ahead.
But chemists have great faith. Borophene may just become the next wonder material to entrance the world.
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