“…Graphene − and its inorganic analogues Xenes such as borophene, − phosphorene, stanene, and germanene, 2D-gold, transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), metal oxides (2DMOs), and MXenes (metal nitrides, carbides, and carbonitrides) due to their fascinating behavior have revolutionized materials science and technology where the corresponding bulk or nanomaterials do not compete with their 2D forms. − They have successfully been employed in excitonics, in molecular sensing, as oxidation-resistant laminates, as a laser shield, and in manipulation of single-photon emission. − Even though straining and hybridization have already been implemented to manipulate material properties, substitutional doping is the apt strategy to change the material intrinsically and irreversibly. − Bandgap engineering in 2D materials is essential to meet the needs of electronic, optoelectronic, spintronic, and straintronic chips, as they are mechanically flexible at a few monolayer thicknesses. , While graphene gets oxidized, molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) gets structurally degraded at elevated temperatures. Therefore, for high-temperature applications of these flexible, functional chips, one needs to explore 2D materials that can withstand high temperatures, keeping structural and chemical phase qualities intact.…”