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Scientific Reports logoLink to Scientific Reports
. 2024 Feb 15;14:3817. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-53969-2

Synthesis of 2D layered transition metal (Ni, Co) hydroxides via edge-on condensation

Lu Ping 1,#, Gillian E Minarik 2,#, Hongze Gao 2, Jun Cao 2, Tianshu Li 1, Hikari Kitadai 2, Xi Ling 1,2,3,
PMCID: PMC10869340  PMID: 38361022

Abstract

Layered transition metal hydroxides (LTMHs) with transition metal centers sandwiched between layers of coordinating hydroxide anions have attracted considerable interest for their potential in developing clean energy sources and storage technologies. However, two-dimensional (2D) LTMHs remain largely understudied in terms of physical properties and applications in electronic devices. Here, for the first time we report > 20 μm α-Ni(OH)2 2D crystals, synthesized from hydrothermal reaction. And an edge-on condensation mechanism assisted with the crystal field geometry is proposed to understand the 2D intra-planar growth of the crystals, which is also testified through series of systematic comparative studies. We also report the successful synthesis of 2D Co(OH)2 crystals (> 40 μm) with more irregular shape due to the slightly distorted octahedral geometry of the crystal field. Moreover, the detailed structural characterization of synthesized α-Ni(OH)2 are performed. The optical band gap energy is extrapolated as 2.54 eV from optical absorption measurements and the electronic bandgap is measured as 2.52 eV from reflected electrons energy loss spectroscopy (REELS). We further demonstrate its potential as a wide bandgap (WBG) semiconductor for high voltage operation in 2D electronics with a high breakdown strength, 4.77 MV/cm with 4.9 nm thickness. The successful realization of the 2D LTMHs opens the door for future exploration of more fundamental physical properties and device applications.

Subject terms: Chemistry, Engineering, Materials science, Physics

Introduction

The first successful exfoliation of graphene in 2004 sparked a dramatic increase in two-dimensional (2D) materials research and the repertoire of reported 2D materials family has since expanded. 2D crystals composed of single- or few-layers of atoms display extraordinary chemical, optical, and electronic properties compared with their bulk 3D counterparts due to quantum confinement effect1. Nevertheless, only several 2D materials such as graphene2, transition metal dichalcogenides3, and hexagonal boron nitride4,5, are reasonably well-studied for 2D electronic and optoelectronic applications, thanks to the development of successful synthesis methods for large domains and films. Among the over thousands of van der Waals 2D materials6,7, unfortunately, many of them are underexplored experimentally, due to the lack of proper synthesis methods for sufficiently large domains. For example, layered transition metal hydroxides (LTMHs) are a group of materials with van der Waals layered structures, but not well studied as 2D electronic materials so far. Several synthetic methods have been proposed to achieve 2D LTMHs crystals including chemical precipitation8,9, electrochemical precipitation10,11, chemical aging12, sol–gel13, hydrothermal14, solvothermal methods15, and top-down exfoliations16. The obtained materials have demonstrated great capability as high-performance electrocatalysts for oxygen evolution reaction (OER)17,18 and high-capacity electrode materials for supercapacitors19,20 thereby exhibiting great potential for applications in terms of clean energy2123 and energy storage2426. However, the reported 2D LTMHs are usually nanosheets13,16, nanoplates27,28, nanoflowers29 with domain size from hundreds of nm to a few µm. Larger lateral domains of 2D LTMHs (> 10 µm) that are desired for certain applications such as semiconductor devices have never been reported30,31. Thus, studies of their electronic and magnetic properties have been limited to theoretical investigation3234.

In this work, we achieve largest ever reported 2D α-Ni(OH)2 single crystals (> 20 µm) and Co(OH)2 (> 40 µm) in a hydrothermal synthesis process. The 2D growth mechanism of LTMHs is established and its different exertion on different transition metals (Ni, Co) is discussed and explained by spin-state geometry theory. Specifically, [Ni(H2O)6]2+ that has perfect Oh symmetry, allows the new units adding on via the edge and limits the expansion of the crystals in two directions only. Additionally, a comprehensive experimental study is performed using the hydrothermal method to testify the 2D growth mechanism of LTMHs. Further characterizations on the structure and electric properties of the as synthesized 2D Ni(OH)2 reveal high crystallinity, mostly α phase, and bandgap of 2.5 eV with a high breakdown strength of 4.77 MV/cm on a 4.9 nm thick flake, showing a great potential as WBG semiconductor for high voltage operation. We anticipate this achievement will pave the way for the study of fundamental properties and applications of 2D LTMHs crystals in 2D micro-nanoelectronics devices, which is not accessible on reported LTMH samples with limited domain sizes.

Results and discussion

Synthesis and morphology characterization of 2D Ni(OH)2 and Co(OH)2

Figure 1A,B show the crystal structure of α-M(OH)2 (M = Ni and Co), which is a typical layered material with a “sandwich” structure of bivalent metals between two layers of octahedrally-coordinated OH anions. The intercalation of H2O between the layers expands the interlayer distance and distinguishes α phase from β phase, which has a smaller interlayer gap due to the absence of intercalation (Fig. S1). In a typical synthesis condition (more details in “Methods”), we perform the reaction at 120 °C with a cooling rate of 1.5 °C/min, which gives the most and largest 2D domains of Ni(OH)2 (Fig. 1C). The surface morphology is further characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (Fig. 1C inset), showing the flakes are continuous and smooth, despite small dis-uniformity probably due to thickness change or contaminations. Moreover, Fig. 1D shows the atomic force microscopy (AFM) image of a flake of 6.3 nm, corresponding to ~ 8 atomic layers35. More AFM images of large flakes are shown in Fig. S2, showing the continuous crystal domain in a large area. The average domain size and thickness is 20 μm (Fig. 1E) and 16 nm (Fig. 1F), respectively, through surveying 100 flakes in randomly chosen areas. Notably, this is the largest domain size of 2D Ni(OH)2 ever reported, which is also extraordinary compared to other 2D nanosheets typically synthesized using hydrothermal methods3640. We also obtain the aspect ratio (dimensionless) by measuring the diameters of each flake along the two perpendicular directions. The plotted distribution (Fig. 1E inset) indicates about 50% of flakes have an aspect ratio of 1.0 and 84% of surveyed flakes maintain quasi-circular dimensions with aspect ratios within the range of 0.8–1.2. The (quasi-) circular shape observed visually is the consequence of the isotropic and outward radial crystal growth. Specifically, Ni2+ with its d8 configuration (Fig. S3) has an even number of electrons on degenerate orbitals, experiencing no distortion from Jahn–Teller (JT) theorem, which describes spontaneous symmetry breaking to provide energetic stabilization of transition metal complexes when there is an odd number of electrons occupying degenerate orbitals4143. The perfect Oh symmetry on [Ni(H2O)6]2+ with identical bond length and electron density on all six Ni-H2O metal–ligand coordination bonds allows the formation of 2D crystals with large domain.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Crystal structure and morphology characterization of M-(OH)2, (M = Ni, Co) (A,B) Crystal structure of α-M(OH)2. (A) Side view; (B) Top view. (C) Optical image and SEM image (inset) of synthesized Ni(OH)2 flakes on SiO2/Si substrate. (D) AFM image of a Ni(OH)2 flake, the white dash line indicates the location where the thickness is measured. Inset: height profile along the white dash line. (E) Size distribution of 100 Ni(OH)2 flakes in a randomly chosen area. Inset: aspect ratio distribution, which is defined as the ratio of diameters measured along two perpendicular directions, indicating the shape of flakes. (F) Thickness distribution of 100 Ni(OH)2 flakes in a randomly chosen area. (G) Optical image of synthesized 2D Co(OH)2 flakes on SiO2/Si substrate, domain size reaches ~ 40 µm on one direction. Inset: SEM image of synthesized 2D Co(OH)2 on SiO2/Si substrate, showing the crystal domain is continuous. (H) AFM image of a Co(OH)2 flake, the white dash line indicates the location where the thickness is measured. Inset: height profile along the white dash line, showing the thickness of the flakes is 2.5 nm.

Following the same synthesis protocol, we also successfully obtain Co(OH)2 thin flakes with even larger domains (> 40 μm), but the shapes are random rather than circular and the density of such large domains is significantly lower than that of Ni(OH)2 (Fig. 1G). This is also the largest Co(OH)2 ultrathin domains (Fig. 1H) ever reported4446 and the identification from X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) is shown in Fig. S4. The surface morphology revealed by SEM (Fig. 1G inset) suggests the continuity of these crystals and shows the edge of Co(OH)2 is less tide compared with Ni(OH)2, which is caused by the high spin d7 configuration of [Co(H2O)6]2+. For [Co(H2O)6]2+ (Fig. S5), it suffers slight JT distortion and has a weak compression along the z-axis due to one vacancy in t2g set, leading to D4h symmetry47. The small degree of JT distortions leads to less perfect structural alignment when [Co(H2O)6]2+ units add onto the exiting seed crystals, which would result in distorted-quasi circular morphology, but the large domain size could still possibly be achieved (Fig. 1G). Another case of JT distortion is presented with [Cu(H2O)6]2+ (Fig. S6), where the high spin d9 configuration of Cu2+ leads to three electrons in the eg set, and thus largely elongates along the z-axis47,48. While the elongated axial bonds in [Cu(H2O)6]2+ also give the complex D4h symmetry, the degree of distortion is more pronounced owing to the fact that the eg set are anti-bonding orbitals (Fig. S6A), which would likely to direct the growth on a singular direction (Fig. S6B), forming nanorods49 or nanobelt50.

Investigation of the 2D growth mechanism of Ni(OH)2

During the synthesis, seed crystals formed by a few Ni2+ ions with edge hydroxyl ions and localized negative charge (Fig. 2A I) initiate the 2D growth51. In order for a single crystal to maintain electrical neutrality, the negative charged seed crystal attracts more Ni2+ ions to approach (Fig. 2A II). Meanwhile, the “hanging” water of solvated [Ni(H2O)6]2+ units formed in aqueous solution will be substituted by hydroxyl groups rapidly and chemical bonds will be built between seed crystal and [Ni(H2O)6]2+ units in the solution since the [Ni(H2O)6]2+ is a stable yet labile species. Once this association has been established, continued substitution will occur at the newly bound metal ion (Fig. 2A III) until it is pulled down into the crystal structure (Fig. 2A IV). The terminal H2O ligands further deprotonate to form new hanging hydroxy groups and bind with new approaching [Ni(H2O)6]2+ units (Fig. 2A V). Since each surface OH of seed crystal is already bonded with three Ni2+ and have fully incorporated into the crystal structure (Fig. 2A), the free moving [Ni(H2O)6]2+ units tend to approach these intra-planar “hanging” ligands at the edge that have strong localized negative charge. Thus, the expansion is limited to two dimensions only, leading to the formation of 2D structure.

Figure 2.

Figure 2

2D Ni(OH)2 growth mechanism. (A) 2D growth mechanism of Ni(OH)2 via edge-on condensation after nucleation. I. The buildup of localized negative charge (orange ring) incurred by edge OH ions on the nucleus attracts approach of Ni2+ ions; II. Ligand exchange at labile Ni2+ centers, undergoing substitution with hanging OH groups when proximal to an existing crystal, which guides continues substitution of terminal OH groups at newly bounded Ni2+; III. The unit is locking into the crystal structure; IV. Deprotonation of coordinated H2O or its displacement by OH to extend the crystal domain (V) or to continue the add-on (II). (B) Schematic of [Ni(NH3)6]2+ blocking the growing nuclei and crystals, the orange ring represents the localized negative charge. (C) Optical image of the obtained 2D Ni(OH)2 without additional NH4OH, where circular flakes are widely observed. (D) Optical image of the obtained 2D Ni(OH)2 with 0.6 ml additional NH4OH, the crystal size are significantly decreased. (E) Absorbance of 2D Ni(OH)2/H2O dispersion without (red curve) and with 0.6 ml additional NH4OH (purple curve), three absorption bands assigned left to right as 3A2g3T1g (3F), 3A2g3T1g (3F), 3A2g3T2g, consistent with homoleptic six-coordinate Ni(II) complexes. Inset: 2D Ni(OH)2/H2O dispersion of (C) (left) and (D) (right).

In order to testify the mechanism, we investigated the influence of several parameters to the synthesis including the temperature, cooling rate and pH. The detailed discussion can be found in Supplementary Information (Sect. 1). Here we focus on the discussion of the role of NH3 to support the proposed 2D growth mechanism. As a stronger field ligand compared with H2O, NH3 could bond with solvated Ni2+ and form [Ni(NH3)6]2+ (Fig. 2B I), competing with [Ni(H2O)6]2+ at the nuclei edge. However, unlike [Ni(H2O)6]2+, the addition of [Ni(NH3)6]2+ onto nuclei will terminate the expansion of 2D crystals since the edge NH3 hardly can deprotonate to maintain the localized negative charge (Fig. 2B V). Therefore, the resulting crystals would have smaller domain size, which is also observed from our experiment results.

Figure 2C shows the optical image of the obtained 2D Ni(OH)2 without additional NH4OH, where numerous 2D circular flakes are observed. And with 0.6 ml additional NH4OH (Fig. 2D), domain size of the flakes significantly decreases. Optical images of obtained 2D Ni(OH)2 with different amounts of additional NH4OH can be found in Fig. S7, showing with increasing amount of additional NH4OH, the domain size decreases and eventually bulk aggregates are yielded instead of 2D crystals. This is due to the hydrolysis of NH4OH, which brings more NH3 into the system to form more [Ni(NH3)6]2+ or monohydrate substituted [Ni(H2O)x(NH3)6-x]2+ (where x ≥ 1), which prevents the 2D expansion based on our proposed mechanism described above. This hypothesis is further supported by the UV–Vis measurements (Fig. 2E). Three absorption bands assigned left to right as 3A2g → 3T1g (3F), 3A2g → 3T1g (3F), 3A2g → 3T2g, are consistent with homoleptic six-coordinate Ni(II) complexes52. The increased absorption intensity (purple curve) and blue color (Fig. 2E inset) with 0.6 ml additional NH4OH both suggest more [Ni(H2O)x(NH3)6-x]2+ are formed.

Structural and crystallographic characterization of 2D α-Ni(OH)2

We further characterize the synthesized Ni(OH)2 flakes using XPS. The survey spectrum (Fig. S8A) clearly indicates the presence of Ni, O elements53 and some other elements from substrate and environment with low intensity. The core-level spectrum of Ni 2p (Fig. 3A) shows the two major peaks at 856.1 (Ni 2p3/2) and 873.8 eV (Ni 2p1/2) with a spin-orbital coupling caused splitting of 17.6 eV, which is characteristic of the Ni2+ ion in Ni(OH)254,55. Meanwhile, the O1 s spectrum (Fig. S8B) is fitted with three peaks located at 531.1, 532.4 and 533.2 eV, representing Ni–O–H, O–Si–O and H–O–H, respectively56. The appearance of H–O-H signal suggests the existence of H2O in the crystal, mainly as intercalation species between layers to form α-Ni(OH)2.

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Crystallographic characterization of Ni(OH)2. (A) XPS spectra of Ni 2p, suggesting a 17.6 eV spin energy separation, which is characteristic of the Ni2+ in Ni(OH)2. (B) Raman spectra of Ag nanopillar SERS substrate with and without Ni(OH)2 thin flakes on. Characteristic peaks of α-Ni(OH)2 indicated by “stars” are observed and a fingerprint one is observed at 3610 cm−1. Inset: SEM image of Ag nanopillar SERS substrate with and without Ni(OH)2 thin flakes on. (C) Low-magnification TEM image. Inset: the SAED pattern. (D) High-magnification TEM image, the d-spacing of 110 lattice plane is measured as 1.50 Å.

To better probe the crystal phase of the 2D thin flakes, surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) measurement using a commercial Ag-nanopillar-coated substrate (Fig. 3B inset) is performed, as the synthesized α-Ni(OH)2 flakes are too thin to exhibit visible Raman signals using the normal Raman spectroscopy measurements. The fingerprint for identifying α-Ni(OH)2 from β-Ni(OH)2 or the mixture is observed at 3610 cm−1 (Fig. 3B)12,57. Moreover, the phonon mode of α-Ni(OH)2 is observed at 460 cm−1, the 2nd order phonon modes of α-Ni(OH)2 are observed at 979 and 1055 cm−1, further proving α phase of the synthesized Ni(OH)2.

More importantly, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements are carried out to further reveal the structure in the flakes. The low-resolution TEM image in Fig. 3C reveals the 2D nature of a micrometer large domain of a typical sample. The selected area electron diffraction (SAED) (Fig. 3C inset) reveals the hexagonal lattice structure, matching well with the simulated lattice pattern (Fig. S9A)58. The sharp signals of the SAED patterns collected from multiple area suggest the high crystallinity of the sample crystal (Fig. S9B–D). Moreover, atomic-resolution TEM image (Fig. 3D) shows the spacing between (110) planes is 1.50 Å.

Furthermore, the thermal stability of the materials and chemical stability in solvents are studied and showed in Fig. S10. In Fig. S10A, XPS spectra of Ni(OH)2 and NiO that oxidized under different temperatures are shown. The energy separation on Ni 2p spectra remains the same when the temperature is 150 °C and changes dramatically when the temperature is lifted to 160 °C, suggesting the synthesized 2D Ni(OH)2 is stable and does not decompose until 160 °C. Besides, the stability of the synthesized 2D Ni(OH)2 in different solvents, i.e., isopropyl alcohol (IPA), acetone, ethanol, toluene, are investigated. After 30 min of immersion in each solvent, 2D Ni(OH)2 flakes contain the same shape as pretreatment (Fig. S10B), which suggest its great chemical stability in organic solvents. The above stability tests provide important guidance for following device fabrication.

Optical and electric characterization of 2D α-Ni(OH)2

Ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy (UV–Vis) is carried out on Ni(OH)2 thin flakes spin-coated on indium tin oxide (ITO) coated glass. The optical absorption spectrum (Fig. 4A) is obtained from 300 to 700 nm. In addition, Tauc plot (Fig. 4B) is derived on the direct bandgap33,59 and two bandgaps are extrapolated, 2.54 eV and 3.51 eV, corresponding to few-layers and bulk Ni(OH)2, respectively59,60. Note that the bandgap of 2D α-Ni(OH)2 is smaller than that of its bulk counterpart, which has been reported as an exceptional deviation from the quantum confinement effect59 and is opposite from most other 2D materials61,62. Moreover, the electronic bandgap is also measured using reflected electrons energy loss spectroscopy (REELS). As shown in Fig. 4C, a bandgap of 2.52 eV is obtained by measuring the distance between the center of elastic scattering peak and the cutoff of the low energy loss region.

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Optical and electrical characterizations of Ni(OH)2. (A) Optical absorption spectrum of few layers α-Ni(OH)2 thin flakes on ITO glass, measured by UV–Vis from 300 to 700 nm. (B) Tauc plot derived from (A), the extrapolated bandgaps are 2.54 eV and 3.51 eV, corresponding to few layers and bulk α-Ni(OH)2, respectively. (C) Bandgap extrapolated from reflected electrons energy loss spectroscopy (REELS) by measuring the gap between the center of elastic scattering peak and the cutoff of the low energy loss peak is 2.52 eV. (D) Schematic of Au-Ni(OH)2-Ti sandwich-like device. The top Ti electrode is grounded and voltage is applied on the bottom Au electrode for all measurements. (E) Typical I-V characteristics of samples with different thicknesses, from 4.9 to 18.3 nm. Current increases exponentially under positive bias on all four measured samples. Inset: optical image of the device. (F) Current density–electric field strength correlation of the tested samples with current in logarithm scale. The thinnest sample, 4.9 nm, exhibits the highest breakdown field, 4.47 MV/cm.

Together with its large domain size, the relatively large bandgap of 2D α-Ni(OH)2 motivates us to investigate its electric properties. An Au-Ni(OH)2-Ti sandwich-like structure is fabricated for electric property measurements (Fig. 4D), where the top Ti electrode is grounded and voltage is applied on the bottom Au electrodes. Figure 4E shows the typical I-V curves of the devices (as shown in Fig. 4E inset) based on samples with different thicknesses from 4.9 to 18.3 nm. For all four devices, the current grows exponentially with positive voltage, while a much lower or negligible current is observed with negative voltage. This unipolar conducting characteristic is attributed to the difference in Schottky barrier height (S.B.H.) at the Au-Ni(OH)2 and Ti-Ni(OH)2 interfaces. Given a much higher work function of Au compared to Ti, Au is expected to form a higher barrier with 2D Ni(OH)263. When a positive voltage is applied on the Au electrode, this barrier is forward biased, resulting in an exponential I-V curve once the voltage exceeds its threshold value (Fig. S11A). Otherwise, the barrier is reversely biased, and no current is present before breakdown. We further convert the bias voltage into electric field strength to extract the breakdown field of each device (Fig. 4F), which is 4.47, 2.92, 1.73 and 1.64 MV/cm for 4.9, 8.6, 14.8, and 18.3 nm Ni(OH)2 flakes, respectively (Fig. S11B). The reduced electric strength at higher thickness may come from the higher density of defects at higher thickness, which is also observed in other 2D WBG materials (e.g., h-BN, SiO264. Nonetheless, the large bandgap and high breakdown strength suggest its great potential for high voltage operation compared to SiC and GaN (Fig. S11C). Thus, the addition of Ni(OH)2 to the 2D family provides a promising candidate as WBG semiconductor for future micro-nanoelectronics devices. From the synthesis point of view, the results demonstrate the great continuity and uniformity of the synthesized 2D Ni(OH)2 flakes.

Conclusion

In conclusion, we achieve the largest ever reported 2D Ni(OH)2 (> 20 μm) and Co(OH)2 (> 40 μm) crystals down to a few nanometers in the hydrothermal synthesis process with a comprehensive understanding of the growth mechanism. Specifically, a direct relationship between spin-state controlled metal–ligand geometry and macroscopic morphology of the LTMHs is built, illustrating the preferred geometry from the growth. A 2D growth mechanism via edge-on condensation at atomic level is established for the hydrothermal synthesis of Ni(OH)2 through a systematic investigation on the influence of key parameters. The reaction-morphology relationship elaborated herein provides a blueprint for a well-guided approach towards the successful design and development of more 2D LTMHs. Moreover, the detailed characterization on the synthesized Ni(OH)2 flakes shows the high crystallinity, α phase, and large bandgap of 2.5 eV. Electrical measurements further suggest its great potential of as a WBG semiconductor for high voltage operation in 2D electronic devices. Considering the great scalability of the hydrothermal synthesis method, our work suggests a promising future of joining LTMHs in the 2D family as a group of important members for future micro-nanoelectronics.

Methods

Hydrothermal synthesis

The synthesis is initiated by combining 0.504 g nickel nitrate hexahydrate, an inexpensive, commercially available salt, with 0.456 g carbamide, commonly known as urea, in the mixture of ethylene glycol (28 ml) and deionized water (4 ml). After 30 min stirring under room temperature, the solution is transferred to a 100 ml Teflon vessel, which is sealed into a hydrothermal autoclave reactor afterwards. For an optimal synthesis, the reactor is sent into an oven, in which the temperature is raised up to 120 °C at a speed of 1.5 °C/min. After 18 h soaking, the reactor is cooled down to room temperature as the same speed as heating up, then the solution is washed by ethanol and deionized (DI) water for three times each and eventually dispersed in DI water (usually ~ 40–50 ml) for storage. The obtained flakes are high yielding on gram scales and gradually sinking to bottom over time.

Sample preparation

The synthesized thin Ni(OH)2 flakes are extracted from the bulk material by centrifugation. After 4 h centrifuge at 9500 rpm, 3–4 drops (~ 0.15–0.2 ml) of clear supernatant is drop-casted on 1 × 1 cm: (1) 300 nm SiO2/Si substrates for optical images, AFM, SEM, (2) Si substrates for XPS, (3) copper grids and silicon nitrite grids for TEM, (4) Ag-nanopillar-coated substrate for SERS and dried by heating on hot plate at 80 °C for 2 h. The clear supernatant and dispersion are spin-coated on ITO glasses for UV–Vis measurements. The sediment is collected and dried at 80 °C for 12 h for PXRD.

Chemicals and materials

All reagents (carbamide with purity 98 + %, nickel nitrate hexahydrate with purity 98%) are purchased from Fisher chemical and used without further purification, with the exception of nickel nitrate hexahydrate, which is recrystallized from supersaturated aqueous solution.

Characterization techniques

Optical images are collected by optical microscopy (Nikon DS-Ri2). AFM topography is acquired on a Bruker Dimension 3000 in a tapping mode. SEM images are taken on Zeiss Supra 55. XPS spectra are collected from PHI Versaprobe II. TEM measurements are performed on a FEI Tecnai Osiris TEM, operating at a 200 keV accelerating voltage. SAED is measured on a JEOL 2100 TEM. The SAED simulation is performed through STEM_CELL software. PXRD scanning are performed on a Bruker D2 Phaser with Cu Kα radiation of wavelength λ = 1.54184 Å at 30 kV and 10 mA. SERS measurement is performed on a Horiba-JY T64000, using a triple-grating mode with 1800 g mm–1 gratings, and a 532 nm laser line. Solution- and solid-state UV–Vis spectra are taken with Agilent Cary 5000. REELS measurement is carried out on Thermo Scientific Nexsa G2 and data is analyzed using Avantage software.

Electric measurements

The Au electrodes are firstly fabricated on the SiO2/Si surface, 2D Ni(OH)2 flakes are then transferred on top of the Au electrode. Ti electrode is then deposited on the top of 2D Ni(OH)2 form an Au-Ni(OH)2-Ti sandwich-like structure from bottom to top. During the measurement, the top Ti electrode is grounded and voltage is applied on the bottom Au electrodes.

Supplementary Information

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgement is made to the donors of the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund under Grant No. (PRF# 61965-ND10) for support of this research. X.L. acknowledges the support of Boston University and Boston University Photonics Center. T.L., J.C. and X.L. acknowledge the support from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES), under Award DE-SC0021064. L.P. and X.L. also acknowledge the support of Ignition Award from Boston University and the support of National Science Foundation (NSF) under Grant No. (2216008). H.Z.G. acknowledges the support of BUnano Cross-Disciplinary Fellowship. H.K. and X.L. acknowledge the support of the NSF under Grant No. (1945364). Acknowledgement is made to Prof. Kenneth Burch’s group at Boston College for device fabrication assistance; to Harvard Center of Nanoscale System (CNS) for XPS Measurements; to Thermo Fisher Scientific for REELS measurement.

Author contributions

L.P. and X.L. conceived and designed the experiments. L.P., G.M., performed all the synthesis. L.P., H.G., T.L., J.C. and H.K. characterized the samples. L.P., G.M. and X.L. analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript. All authors discussed the results and commented on the manuscript.

Data availability

All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article and its supplementary information file.

Competing interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

Footnotes

Publisher's note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

These authors contributed equally: Lu Ping and Gillian E. Minarik.

Supplementary Information

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41598-024-53969-2.

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