Phosphorene is a mono-elemental two-dimensional (2D) material with outstanding, highly directional properties and a thickness-tuneable band gap 1-8. Nanoribbons combine the flexibility and unidirectional properties of 1D nanomaterials, the high surface area of 2D nanomaterials and the electron-confinement and edge effects of both. Their structures can thus offer exceptional control over electronic bandstructure, lead to the emergence of novel phenomena and present unique architectures for applications 5,6,9-24. Motivated by phosphorene's intrinsically anisotropic structure, theoretical predictions of the extraordinary properties of phosphorene nanoribbons (PNRs) have been rapidly emerging in recent years 5,6,12-24. However to date, discrete PNRs have not been produced. Here we present a method for creating quantities of high quality, individual PNRs via ionic scissoring of macroscopic black phosphorus crystals. The top-down process results in stable liquid dispersions of PNRs with typical widths of 4 to 50 nm, predominantly single layer thickness, measured lengths up to 75 μm and aspect ratios of up to ~1000. The nanoribbons are atomically-flat single crystals, aligned exclusively in the zigzag crystallographic orientation. The ribbon widths are remarkably uniform along their entire length and they display extreme flexibility. These properties, in conjunction with the ease of downstream manipulation via liquidphase methods, now enable the search for predicted exotic states 6,12-14,17-19,21 and an array of applications where PNRs have been widely predicted to offer transformative advantages, ranging from thermoelectric devices to high-capacity fast-charging batteries and integrated high-speed electronic circuits 6,14-16,20,23,24. Phosphorene's anisotropic properties, including for electron, thermal and ionic transport, derive from its atomic structure where the atoms are arranged in corrugated sheets with two different P-P bond lengths (Fig. 1a) 1-8. Calculations predict that PNRs can possess enhanced characteristics compared with phosphorene and that their electronic structure, carrier mobilities and optical and mechanical properties can be tuned by varying the ribbon width, thickness, edge passivation, and by introducing strain or functionalization 6,12-14,20,22-24. Additionally, there have been numerous predictions of exotic effects in PNRs, including the spin-dependent Seebeck effect 17 , room temperature magnetism 6,21 , topological phase transitions 18 , large exciton splitting 14 and spin density waves 19. These results have led to suggestions of unique capabilities of PNRs in a number of applications such as thermoelectric devices 6,23 , photocatalytic water splitting 15 , solar cells 14 , batteries 6,24 , electronics 6,20,22 and quantum information technologies 14 .
A primary method for the production of 2D nanosheets is liquid-phase delamination from their 3D layered bulk analogues. Most strategies currently achieve this objective by significant mechanical energy input or chemical modification but these processes are detrimental to the structure and properties of the resulting 2D nanomaterials. Bulk poly(triazine imide) (PTI)-based carbon nitrides are layered materials with a high degree of crystalline order. Here, we demonstrate that these semiconductors are spontaneously soluble in select polar aprotic solvents, that is, without any chemical or physical intervention. In contrast to more aggressive exfoliation strategies, this thermodynamically driven dissolution process perfectly maintains the crystallographic form of the starting material, yielding solutions of defect-free, hexagonal 2D nanosheets with a well-defined size distribution. This pristine nanosheet structure results in narrow, excitation-wavelength-independent photoluminescence emission spectra. Furthermore, by controlling the aggregation state of the nanosheets, we demonstrate that the emission wavelengths can be tuned from narrow UV to broad-band white. This has potential applicability to a range of optoelectronic devices.
a b s t r a c tFollowing the events of March 2011 at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, significant quantities of radioactive material were released into the local and wider global environment. At five years since the incident, much expense is being currently devoted to the remediation of a large portion of eastern Japan contaminated primarily by radiocesium, yet further significant expenditure will be required over the succeeding decades to complete this clean-up. People displaced from their homes by the incident are now increasingly keen to return, making it more important than ever to provide accurate quantification and representation of any residual radiological contamination. Presented here is the use of an unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with a laser rangefinder unit to generate a three dimensional point-cloud of an area onto which a radiation contamination map, also obtained concurrently via the unmanned aerial platform, can be rendered. An exemplar site of an un-remediated farm consisting of multiple stepped rice paddy fields with a dedicated irrigation system was used for this work. The results obtained show that heightened radiological contamination exists around the site within the drainage network where material is observed to have collected, having been transported by transient water runoff events. These results obtained in May 2014 suggest that a proportion of the fallout material is highly mobile within the natural environment and is likely to be transported further through the system over the succeeding years.
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