AlB2-type layered metal diborides have sought
renewed
research attention in recent years on account of their ability to
yield XBenestheir quasi-two-dimensional (2D)
counterparts. These quasi-2D nanostructures present exciting avenues
to utilize the rich science offered by metal diborides. While a range
of approaches have been developed to exfoliate layered metal diborides,
the ability to obtain XBenes in a scalable manner
is in its incipient stagesthis is a critical bottleneck in
translating their rich nanoscience into tangible technology. In this
work, we present a scalable approach that employs high-energy ball
milling to exfoliate titanium diboride (TiB2) into its
quasi-2D counterparts at the gram scale. We first show that milling
TiB2 crystals for an optimal duration (6 h) and at a specific
balls-to-powder ratio (20:1) yields multi-layer-thick nanosheets (∼5–10
nm thick). Second, by using Rietveld refinement and Raman spectroscopy,
we show that the chemical integrity of TiB2 is retained
to a large extent upon exfoliationthere is an associated formation
of defects within the crystal structure of TiB2 that evolve
with milling. Finally, we show that upon milling, the native electrochemical
activity of TiB2 is enhanced by several folds. This ability
to obtain nanosheets of TiB2 in a scalable manner using
a high-energy ball mill bridges a critical missing link in the fast-growing
science on nanoscaling AlB2-type metal borides.
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