“…Because of the quantum confinement and surface effects, low-dimensional materials may exhibit extraordinary electronic, optical, thermal, and chemical properties and have great potential in the application of electronics, optoelectronics, and spintronics. − Since the discovery of graphene in 2004, the mechanical exfoliation technique has been widely applied to a variety of van der Waals (vdW) materials to obtain high-quality two-dimensional (2D) materials, for example, hexagonal boron nitride, transition metal dichalcogenides, and black phosphorus. Meanwhile, the preparation of one-dimensional (1D) materials is usually limited to the bottom-up approach, including techniques such as physical vapor deposition, , chemical vapor deposition, , and molecular beam epitaxy. , The mechanical exfoliation method is, in principle, applicable to vdW materials consisting of 1D chains for the preparation of 1D materials, but few reports have addressed this issue to date …”