Misplaced Pages

2D silica

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Polymorph of silicon dioxide
Top and side views of graphene (left) and HBS structures (right). Red atoms are oxygens.
Models and TEM images of defects in HBS (middle) and graphene (bottom row): Stone-Wales (a), flower (b), divacancy (c) and a more complex, interstitial defect (d).
TEM images of amorphous HBS

Two-dimensional silica (2D silica) is a layered polymorph of silicon dioxide. Two varieties of 2D silica, both of hexagonal crystal symmetry, have been grown so far on various metal substrates. One is based on SiO4 tetrahedra, which are covalently bonded to the substrate. The second comprises graphene-like fully saturated sheets, which interact with the substrate via weak van der Waals bonds. One sheet of the second 2D silica variety is also called hexagonal bilayer silica (HBS); it can have either ordered or disordered (amorphous) structure.

2D silica has potential applications in electronics as the thinnest gate dielectric. It can also be used for isolation of graphene sheets from the substrate. 2D silica is a wide band gap semiconductor, whose band gap and geometry can be engineered by external electric field. It was shown to be a member of the auxetics materials family with a negative Poisson's ratio.

References

  1. ^ Björkman, T; Kurasch, S; Lehtinen, O; Kotakoski, J; Yazyev, O. V.; Srivastava, A; Skakalova, V; Smet, J. H.; Kaiser, U; Krasheninnikov, A. V. (2013). "Defects in bilayer silica and graphene: common trends in diverse hexagonal two-dimensional systems". Scientific Reports. 3: 3482. Bibcode:2013NatSR...3E3482B. doi:10.1038/srep03482. PMC 3863822. PMID 24336488.
  2. Özçelik, V. Ongun; Cahangirov, S.; Ciraci, S. (2014-06-20). "Stable Single-Layer Honeycomblike Structure of Silica". Physical Review Letters. 112 (24): 246803. arXiv:1406.2674. Bibcode:2014PhRvL.112x6803O. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.246803. PMID 24996101.


Stub icon

This article about materials science is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Stub icon

This nanotechnology-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: