Surface chemistry altering electronic behaviour of liquid metal-derived tin oxide nanosheets.
Xiaotian WeiChung Kim NguyenPatrick D TaylorVaishnavi KrishnamurthiNitu SyedPhuong Y LeMichelle Jeanette Sapountzis SpencerTorben DaenekeLei BaoPublished in: Nanoscale (2024)
Possessing excellent electronic properties and high chemical stability, semiconducting n-type two-dimensional (2D) tin dioxide (SnO 2 ) nanosheets have been featured in sensing and electrocatalysis applications recently. Derived from non-layered crystal structures, 2D SnO 2 has abundant unsaturated dangling bonds existing at the surface, providing interfacial activity. How the surface chemistry alters the electronic properties of 2D SnO 2 nanomaterials remains unexplored. In this study, we synthesised ultra-thin 2D SnO 2 nanosheets using a liquid metal (LM) touch printing technique and investigated experimentally and theoretically how the interactions of organic solvents composed of alkyl and hydroxyl groups with the surface of LM-derived 2D SnO 2 modulate the electronic properties. It was found that alkane solvents can physically absorb onto the SnO 2 surface with no impact on the material conductivity. Alcohol-based solvents on the other hand interact with the SnO 2 surface via chemical absorptions primarily, in which oxygen atoms of hydroxyl groups in the alcohols form bonds with the surface atoms of SnO 2 . The binding stability is determined by the length and configuration of the hydrocarbon chain in alcohols. As representative long-chain alcohols, 1-octanol and 1-pentanol attach onto the SnO 2 surface strongly, lowering the binding energy of Sn 4+ and reducing the electron transfer ability of SnO 2 nanosheets. Consequently, the electronic properties, i.e. conductivity and electronic mobility of SnO 2 nanosheet-based electronic devices are decreased significantly.