Abstract
Surface Chemistry Unlike graphene and transition-metal dichalcogenides, two-dimensional transition-metal carbides (MXenes) have many surface sites that can be chemically modified. Etching of the aluminum layer of a parent MAX phase Ti3AlC2 layered material with hydrofluoric acid leads to the MXene Ti3C2 with various surface terminations. Molten salts can achieve uniform chloride terminations, but these are difficult to further modify. Kamysbayev et al. show that etching of MAX phases in molten cadmium bromide leads to bromide-terminated MXenes that can then be substituted with oxygen, sulfur, selenium, tellurium, and NH groups as well as with vacancy sites. The surface groups can alter electronic transport. For example, the Nb2C MXenes exhibit surface group–dependent superconductivity. Science , this issue p. [979][1] [1]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.aba8311
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