Noble gas atoms are hard to tame. They seldom participate in chemical reactions, and only condense into liquids and solids at temperatures far below 0 °C. Yet Huanyao Cun and colleagues now show that argon atoms can be coaxed into regular two-dimensional lattices at room temperature (Nano Lett. http://doi.org/10.1021/nl400449y; 2013).

Cun et al. started with a single layer of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) on top of a rhodium(111) surface. Driven by the tendency of nitrogen atoms to bind to rhodium atoms, the h-BN sheet spontaneously adopts a corrugated form to compensate for the intrinsic lattice mismatch. Scanning tunnelling microscopy shows that the wrinkled layer has a honeycomb structure — just like a flat, undeformed h-BN sheet, but with a larger lattice constant (3.2 nm). A closer look reveals that this h-BN nanomesh consists of 'pores', where the sheet is in close contact with the substrate, surrounded by 'wires' — regions with a slightly larger sheet–substrate distance. The pores lie at the centres of hexagonal cells, the edges of which are formed by the wires, producing the honeycomb superstructure.

Credit: © ISTOCKPHOTO/THINKSTOCK

Exposing the nanomesh to a beam of Ar+ ions results in the implantation of argon atoms between the rhodium substrate and the h-BN sheet. Using scanning tunnelling microscopy, photoemission spectroscopy and density-functional-theory calculations, the authors were able to show that the argon atoms occupy particular sites under the nanomesh — directly below wire crossings, as indicated by protrusions of the h-BN sheet. The argon atoms thus take on an ordered two-dimensional arrangement.

Remarkable behaviour is observed when this sandwich of rhodium, argon and boron nitride is heated up to 900 K. The argon protrusions at wire crossings disappear, and the nanomesh starts to develop holes. Pieces of h-BN appear on the nanomesh, each flake lying close to a hole, and of a similar size. Cun et al. suggest that these flakes have been cut out of the nanomesh at pore sites, similar to the way the lid is peeled off a tin can. What they call “the can-opener effect” is a consequence of the implanted argon atoms: bombarding the nanomesh with Ar+ ions kicks out boron and nitrogen atoms, leaving vacancies. These defects migrate to pore edges, where they become active sites for thermally induced bond breaking. Thus h-BN flakes are cut from the mesh, and then diffuse away.

Cun et al. have made similar observations when neon atoms are used in place of argon, and the effect is also seen for a graphene layer on a ruthenium(0001) substrate. The holes in the nanomesh form a regular array of potential anchoring sites for molecules, hinting at possible applications in the manufacture of new metamaterials.