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New paper published in Communications Materials on 2D high entropy materials

New perspective paper published in Communications Materials. The high entropy concept is ideally suited for MXenes but also capable to be a unique tool to tailor and improve electrochemical properties in other materials.

Multiple principal element or high-entropy materials have recently been studied in the two-dimensional (2D) materials phase space. These promising classes of materials combine the unique behavior of solid-solution and entropy-stabilized systems with high aspect ratios and atomically thin characteristics of 2D materials. The current experimental space of these materials includes 2D transition metal oxides, carbides/carbonitrides/nitrides (MXenes), dichalcogenides, and hydrotalcites. However, high-entropy 2D materials have the potential to expand into other types, such as 2D metal-organic frameworks, 2D transition metal carbo-chalcogenides, and 2D transition metal borides (MBenes).

So, what is our perspective article about? We discuss the entropy stabilization from bulk to 2D systems, the effects of disordered multi-valent elements on lattice distortion and local electronic structures and elucidate how these local changes influence the catalytic and electrochemical behavior of these 2D high-entropy materials. We also provide a perspective on 2D high-entropy materials research and its challenges and discuss the importance of this emerging field of nanomaterials in designing tunable compositions with unique electronic structures for energy, catalytic, electronic, and structural applications.

This perspective paper has been the result of our collaboration with my dear friend Babak Anasori (with his team: Kartik Nemani and Brian Wyatt) from Purdue University and our team (including Mohammad Torkamanzadeh).