Ultrastrong yet Ductile 2D Titanium Nanomaterial for On-Skin Conformal Triboelectric Sensing

Nano Lett. 2023 Jun 28;23(12):5802-5810. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c01776. Epub 2023 Jun 14.

Abstract

Conventional titanium (e.g., bulk or thin films) is well-known for its relatively high mechanical strength, excellent corrosion resistance, and superior biocompatibility, which are suitable for biomedical engineering and wearable devices. However, the strength of conventional titanium often trades off its ductility, and their use in wearable devices has not been explored yet. In this work, we fabricated a series of large-sized 2D titanium nanomaterials with the method of polymer surface buckling enabled exfoliation (PSBEE), which possess a unique heterogeneous nanostructure containing nanosized titanium, titanium oxide, and MXene-like phases. As a result, these 2D titaniums exhibit both superb mechanical strength (6-13 GPa) and remarkable ductility (25-35%) at room temperature, outperforming all other titanium-based materials reported so far. More interestingly, we demonstrate that the 2D titanium nanomaterials also showed good performance in triboelectric sensing and can be used to fabricate self-powered, on-skin conformal triboelectric sensors with good mechanical reliability.

Keywords: 2D nanomaterial; mechanical properties; titanium; triboelectric sensing.