TY - JOUR
T1 - Iron Oxide Nanoparticle-Assisted Delamination of Ti3C2Tx MXenes
T2 - A New Approach to Produce Magnetic MXene-Based Composites
AU - Sobolev, Kirill
AU - Omelyanchik, Alexander
AU - Shilov, Nikolai
AU - Gorshenkov, Mikhail
AU - Andreev, Nikolai
AU - Comite, Antonio
AU - Slimani, Sawssen
AU - Peddis, Davide
AU - Ovchenkov, Yevgeniy
AU - Vasiliev, Alexander
AU - Magomedov, Kurban E.
AU - Rodionova, Valeria
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by the authors.
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - Ti3C2Tx MXene is one of the most comprehensively studied 2D materials in terms of its adsorptive, transport, and catalytic properties, cytotoxic performance, etc. Still, conventional MXene synthesis approaches provide low single-flake MXene yield and frequently uncontrollable properties, demanding further post-processing. The MXene family also lacks magnetism, which is helpful for producing effective nanoadsorbents as their magnetic decantation is the cheapest and most convenient way to remove the spent adsorbent from water. Composite materials consisting of magnetic nanoparticles grown on top of MXene flakes are commonly used to provide magnetic properties to the resulting nanocomposite. In this paper, we study the possibility to delaminate multilayer Ti3C2Tx MXene sheets directly by growing iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles inside their interlayer spacing. We find out that, with a mass fraction of particles comparable or exceeding that of MXenes, their growth is accompanied by an effective enhancement of single-layer MXene yield and suitable magnetic properties of the resulting composite. The developed approach can be further used for simplifying synthesis protocols to obtain magnetic MXene-based nanoadsorbents with tunable properties.
AB - Ti3C2Tx MXene is one of the most comprehensively studied 2D materials in terms of its adsorptive, transport, and catalytic properties, cytotoxic performance, etc. Still, conventional MXene synthesis approaches provide low single-flake MXene yield and frequently uncontrollable properties, demanding further post-processing. The MXene family also lacks magnetism, which is helpful for producing effective nanoadsorbents as their magnetic decantation is the cheapest and most convenient way to remove the spent adsorbent from water. Composite materials consisting of magnetic nanoparticles grown on top of MXene flakes are commonly used to provide magnetic properties to the resulting nanocomposite. In this paper, we study the possibility to delaminate multilayer Ti3C2Tx MXene sheets directly by growing iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles inside their interlayer spacing. We find out that, with a mass fraction of particles comparable or exceeding that of MXenes, their growth is accompanied by an effective enhancement of single-layer MXene yield and suitable magnetic properties of the resulting composite. The developed approach can be further used for simplifying synthesis protocols to obtain magnetic MXene-based nanoadsorbents with tunable properties.
KW - FeO
KW - MXenes
KW - TiCT
KW - adsorption
KW - chemical delamination
KW - composite materials
KW - magnetic nanoparticles
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85181910421&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/nano14010097
DO - 10.3390/nano14010097
M3 - Article
C2 - 38202551
AN - SCOPUS:85181910421
SN - 2079-4991
VL - 14
JO - Nanomaterials
JF - Nanomaterials
IS - 1
M1 - 97
ER -