MRS Meetings and Events

 

NM01.03.02 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Tuning The Microenvironment of Water Confined in Ti3C2Tx MXene by Cation Intercalation

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
8:45am - 9:00am

Room 330, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Mailis Lounasvuori1,Teng Zhang2,Yury Gogotsi2,Tristan Petit1

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin1,Drexel University2

Abstract

Mailis Lounasvuori1,Teng Zhang2,Yury Gogotsi2,Tristan Petit1

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin1,Drexel University2
The local microenvironment, which is often tuned by adding alkali metal cations to the electrolyte, has recently been found to play a major role in the electrocatalytic activity of nanomaterials.(1) Modulating the microenvironment can be used to either suppress hydrogen or oxygen evolution, thereby extending the electrochemical window of energy storage systems, or to tune the selectivity of electrocatalysts. MXenes are a large family of two-dimensional transition metal carbides, nitrides and carbonitrides that have shown potential for use in electrochemical energy storage applications. Due to their negatively charged surfaces, MXenes can accommodate cations and water molecules in the interlayer space. Nevertheless, the nature of the aqueous microenvironment in the MXene interlayer remains poorly understood. Here, we apply Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to probe the hydrogen bonding of intercalated water in Ti<sub>3</sub>C<sub>2</sub>T<i><sub>x</sub></i> as a function different intercalated cation and relative humidity. Being highly sensitive to different H-bonding states of water confined within the MXene layers,(2,3) especially in the O-H stretching mode region, FTIR spectroscopy enables the direct characterization of the H-bonding network of water and gives information on the relative amounts of water present in the samples. Because anions do not intercalate into MXene,(4) we are able to probe the hydration shell around isolated cations in a 2D confined environment. Strong changes in the hydrogen-bonding of water molecules confined between the MXene layers is observed after cation exchange. Furthermore, the IR absorbance of the confined water correlates with resistivity estimated by 4-point probe measurements and interlayer distance calculated from XRD patterns. This work demonstrates that cation intercalation strongly modulates the confined microenvironment, which can possibly be used to tune the activity or selectivity of electrochemical reactions in the interlayer space of MXenes in the future.<br/><br/>References<br/>1. Schreier, M.; Kenis, P.; Che, F.; Hall, A. S. <i>ACS Energy Lett.</i> <b>2023</b>, <i>8</i> (9), 3935-3940.<br/>2. Lounasvuori, M.; Sun, Y.; Mathis, T. S.; Puskar, L.; Schade, U.; Jiang, D.-E.; Gogotsi, Y.; Petit, T. <i>Nature Commun.</i> <b>2023</b>, <i>14</i> (1), 1322.<br/>3. Lounasvuori, M.; Mathis, T. S.; Gogotsi, Y.; Petit, T. <i>J. Phys. Chem. Lett.</i> <b>2023</b>, <i>14</i> (6), 1578–1584.<br/>4. Shpigel, N.; Chakraborty, A.; Malchik, F.; Bergman, G.; Nimkar, A.; Gavriel, B.; Turgeman, M.; Hong, C. N.; Lukatskaya, M. R.; Levi, M. D.; Gogotsi, Y.; Major, D. T.; Aurbach, D. <i>J. Am. Chem. Soc.</i> <b>2021</b>, <i>143</i> (32), 12552–12559.

Keywords

2D materials | infrared (IR) spectroscopy | water

Symposium Organizers

Stefano Ippolito, Drexel University
Michael Naguib, Tulane University
Zhimei Sun, Beihang University
Xuehang Wang, Delft University of Technology

Symposium Support

Gold
Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd.

Silver
INNOMXENE Co.,Ltd.

Bronze
Energy Advances
Progress in Materials Science The Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature