Chemical Record, volume 20, issue 5, pages 413-428
2D Materials in Light: Excited‐State Dynamics and Applications
Na Li
1
,
Qiang Wang
1
,
Hao Li Zhang
1
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2019-10-04
Journal:
Chemical Record
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.338
CiteScore: 11.0
Impact factor: 7
ISSN: 15278999, 15280691
PubMed ID:
31584251
Materials Chemistry
General Chemistry
Biochemistry
General Chemical Engineering
Abstract
The development of two-dimensional (2D) materials have attracted increasing interest due to their unique structure and various potential applications such as opto-electronic devices and photocatalysis. Our group have contributed to this exciting field by creating novel preparation methods for a various of 2D materials including transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), carbon nitrides and single elemental 2D materials from Group 15. Particularly, employing powerful time-resolved spectroscopic techniques such as femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, we elucidated the excited-state dynamics of 2D materials behind their outstanding performance in photocatalytic and photonic devices. Therefore in this account, we focus on the effective fabrication methods of 2D materials and their photoinduced excited-state dynamics. Following the introduction in Part 1, we will summarize our novel strategies for fabricating 2D materials (Part 2). Then in Part 3 we will introduce the instrumentation for exploring the photoinduced excited-state dynamics of the 2D materials spanning a wide time scale from ultrafast fs to slow ms. Part 4 details the applications of the 2D materials in photocatalysis and nonlinear optics determined by their excited-state physics and chemistry. Part 5 of perspectives summarizes a few future trends of 2D materials on a series of issues like fabrications, dynamic investigations and photonic optoelectronic applications. Collective efforts through researchers from interdisciplinary fields are expected to further push the exciting territory towards a new horizon.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.