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            Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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            Insertion of metal layers between layered transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) enables the design of new pseudo-2D nanomaterials. The general premise is that various metal atoms may adopt energetically favorable intercalation sites between two TMD sheets. These covalently bound metals arrange in metastable configurations and thus enable the controlled synthesis of nanomaterials in a bottom-up approach. Here, this method is demonstrated by the insertion of Cr or Mn between VSe2 layers. Vacuum-deposited transition metals diffuse between VSe2 layers with increasing concentration, arranging in ordered phases. The Cr3+ or Mn2+ ions are in octahedral coordination and thus in a high-spin state. Measured and computed magnetic moments are high for dilute Cr atoms, but with increasing Cr concentration the average magnetic moment decreases, suggesting antiferromagnetic ordering between Cr ions. The many possible combinations of transition metals with TMDs form a library for exploring quantum phenomena in these nanomaterials.more » « less
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            Abstract Van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures that pair materials with diverse properties enable various quantum phenomena. However, the direct growth of vdW heterostructures is challenging. Modification of the surface layer of quantum materials to introduce new properties is an alternative process akin to solid state reaction. Here, vapor deposited transition metals (TMs), Cr and Mn, are reacted with Bi2Se3with the goal to transform the surface layer to XBi2Se4(X = Cr, Mn). Experiments and ab initio MD simulations demonstrate that the TMs have a high selenium affinity driving Se diffusion toward the TM. For monolayer Cr, the surface Bi2Se3is reduced to Bi2‐layer and a stable (pseudo) 2D Cr1+δSe2layer is formed. In contrast, monolayer Mn can transform upon mild annealing into MnBi2Se4. This phase only forms for a precise amount of initial Mn deposition. Sub‐monolayer amounts dissolve into the bulk, and multilayers form stable MnSe adlayers. This study highlights the delicate energy balance between adlayers and desired surface modified layers that governs the interface reactions and that the formation of stable adlayers can prevent the reaction with the substrate. The success of obtaining MnBi2Se4points toward an approach for the engineering of other multicomponent vdW materials by surface reactions.more » « less
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            null (Ed.)Water adsorption on transition metal dichalcogenides and other 2D materials is generally governed by weak van der Waals interactions. This results in a hydrophobic character of the basal planes, and defects may play a significant role in water adsorption and water cluster nucleation. However, there is a lack of detailed experimental investigations on water adsorption on defective 2D materials. Here, by combining low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we study in that context the well-defined mirror twin boundary (MTB) networks separating mirror-grains in 2D MoSe 2 . These MTBs are dangling bond-free extended crystal modifications with metallic electronic states embedded in the 2D semiconducting matrix of MoSe 2 . Our DFT calculations indicate that molecular water also interacts similarly weak with these MTBs as with the defect-free basal plane of MoSe 2 . However, in low temperature STM experiments, nanoscopic water structures are observed that selectively decorate the MTB network. This localized adsorption of water is facilitated by functionalization of the MTBs by hydroxyls formed by dissociated water. Hydroxyls may form by dissociating of water at undercoordinated defects or adsorbing of radicals from the gas phase in the UHV chamber. Our DFT analysis indicates that the metallic MTBs adsorb these radicals much stronger than on the basal plane due to charge transfer from the metallic states into the molecular orbitals of the OH groups. Once the MTBs are functionalized with hydroxyls, molecular water can attach to them, forming water channels along the MTBs. This study demonstrates the role metallic defect states play in the adsorption of water even in the absence of unsaturated bonds that have been so far considered to be crucial for adsorption of hydroxyls or water.more » « less
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