Precision Intercalation of Organic Molecules in 2D Layered Materials: From Interface Chemistry to Low-Dimensional Physics

The past few decades have witnessed significant development in intercalation chemistry research aimed at precisely controlling material properties. Intercalation, as a powerful surface and interface synthesis strategy, facilitates the insertion of external guests into van der Waals (vdW) gaps in two...

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Published inPrecision Chemistry Vol. 3; no. 2; pp. 51 - 71
Main Authors Liu, Yang, Wang, Ziren, Hu, Guoliang, Chen, Xiaomeng, Xu, Ke, Guo, Yuqiao, Xie, Yi, Wu, Changzheng
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States University of Science and Technology of China and American Chemical Society 24.02.2025
American Chemical Society
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Summary:The past few decades have witnessed significant development in intercalation chemistry research aimed at precisely controlling material properties. Intercalation, as a powerful surface and interface synthesis strategy, facilitates the insertion of external guests into van der Waals (vdW) gaps in two-dimensional (2D) layered materials, inducing various modulation effects (the weakening of interlayer interactions, changes in electronic structures, interfacial charge transfer, and symmetry manipulation) to tailor material properties while preserving intralayer covalent bonds. Importantly, benefiting from the very diverse structures and properties of organic molecules, their intercalation enables the integration of various molecules with a wide array of 2D materials, resulting in the creation of numerous organic–inorganic hybrid superlattices with exotic properties, which brings extensive potential applications in fields such as spintronics, superconductor electronics, optoelectronics, and thermoelectrics. Herein, based on recent advancements in organic intercalation systems, we briefly discuss a summary and classification of various organic guest species. We also discuss three modulation effects induced by organic intercalation and further introduce intriguing modulations in physicochemical properties, including superconductivity, magnetism, thermoelectricity and thermal conductivity, chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS) effects, and interlayer-confined chemical reaction. Finally, we offer insights into future research opportunities and emerging challenges in organic intercalation systems.
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ISSN:2771-9316
2771-9316
DOI:10.1021/prechem.4c00084