The quest for planar sp2-hybridized carbon
allotropes other than graphene, such as graphenylene and biphenylene
networks, has stimulated substantial research efforts because of the
materials’ predicted mechanical, electronic, and transport properties.
However, their syntheses remain challenging given the lack of reliable
protocols for generating nonhexagonal rings during the in-plane tiling of
carbon atoms. We report the bottom-up growth of an ultraflat biphenylene
network with periodically arranged four-, six-, and eight-membered rings of
sp2-hybridized carbon atoms through an on-surface
interpolymer dehydrofluorination (HF-zipping) reaction. The characterization
of this biphenylene network by scanning probe methods reveals that it is
metallic rather than a dielectric. We expect the interpolymer HF-zipping
method to complement the toolbox for the synthesis of other nonbenzenoid
carbon allotropes.
To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate that PF can be reversed by a senolytic drug such as ABT-263 after it becomes a progressive disease. Therefore, ABT-263 has the potential to be developed as a new treatment for PF.
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