Boron nitride nanosheet

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Two-layer BN nanosheet.
Atomic-resolution images of a BN nanosheet prepared by CVD.[1]

Boron nitride nanosheet is a crystalline form of the hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) with a thickness of one atom. Similar in geometry as well as physical and thermal properties to its carbon analog, graphene, it has very different chemical and electronic properties. Unlike graphene, which is black and highly conductive, BN nanosheets are electrical insulators with a band gap of ~5.9 eV. They therefore appear white in color.[2]

Uniform monoatomic BN nanosheets can be deposited by catalytic decomposition of borazine at a temperature of ~1100 °C in a chemical vapor deposition apparatus, over substrate areas up to about 10 cm2. Because of their hexagonal atomic structure, small lattice mismatch with graphene (~2%), and high uniformity, they can be used as substrates for graphene-based devices.[2][3]

BN nanosheets consist of sp2-conjugated boron and nitrogen atoms that form a honeycomb structure.[4][5] They contain two different edges: armchair and zig-zag. The armchair edge consists of either boron or nitrogen atoms, while the zig-zag edge consists of alternating boron and nitrogen atoms. These 2D structures can stack on top of each other and are held by Van der Waals forces to form few-layer boron nitride nanosheets. In these structures, the boron atoms of one sheet are positioned on top of or below the nitrogen atoms due to the electron-deficient nature of boron and electron-rich nature of nitrogen.[5][6]

Synthesis

Properties and applications

References

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