Abstract:
Layered inorganic solids and intercalation chemistry
Bulk layered materials have been studied extensively in the past several decades because
of their unique structural features, and physical and chemical properties.[1] Materials with
layered structures remain an extensively investigated subject in current chemistry and physics
due to their interesting properties. The rich family of layered materials consists of singleelement
crystals, such as graphite, phosphorus, arsenic, antimony and bismuth, silicates,
hydroxides, transition metal chalcogenides and many oxides.[2,3] The valuable properties of
layered inorganic solids and the possibility of modification by various post-synthesis
treatments have attracted a lot of attention for many years. Layered materials typically exhibit
strong in-plane covalent bonding and weak out-of-plane van der Waals interactions through
the interlayer gap.