| Literature DB >> 22533903 |
Andres Castellanos-Gomez1, Menno Poot, Gary A Steele, Herre Sj van der Zant, Nicolás Agraït, Gabino Rubio-Bollinger.
Abstract
We fabricate freely suspended nanosheets of molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) which are characterized by quantitative optical microscopy and high-resolution friction force microscopy. We study the elastic deformation of freely suspended nanosheets of MoS2 using an atomic force microscope. The Young's modulus and the initial pre-tension of the nanosheets are determined by performing a nanoscopic version of a bending test experiment. MoS2 sheets show high elasticity and an extremely high Young's modulus (0.30 TPa, 50% larger than steel). These results make them a potential alternative to graphene in applications requiring flexible semiconductor materials.PACS, 73.61.Le, other inorganic semiconductors, 68.65.Ac, multilayers, 62.20.de, elastic moduli, 81.40.Jj, elasticity and anelasticity, stress-strain relations.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22533903 PMCID: PMC3359267 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-7-233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Identification and characterization of freely suspended MoS. (a) Color chart displaying the calculated color for MoS2 nanosheets with different number of layers laying on the substrate (supported) or covering a hole (suspended). (b) Optical micrograph of a 4.8-nm-thick (8 layers) MoS2 flake deposited on top of a 285-nm SiO2/Si substrate pre-patterned with an array of holes 1.1 μm in diameter. Even though the flake covers two holes, it is thin (and transparent) enough to permit optical identification of the covered holes, which present a slightly different color from the uncovered holes, as predicted by the color chart shown in (a). (c) Contact mode AFM topography of the region marked by the rectangle in (b); (inset) topographic line profile acquired along the dashed line in (c). (d) and (e) Raw friction forward images acquired in contact mode AFM in a suspended and a supported region, marked by a red circle and a blue square in (c), respectively. The insets in (d) and (e) show two friction images simulated with a two-dimensional Tomlinson model. Both images have been simulated employing the same crystal lattice and orientation but different depth of the potential well (see text for a full discussion).
Figure 2Bending test experiment on suspended ultrathin MoS. (a) Force versus deformation traces measured by pushing and pulling at the center of the suspended part of MoS2 nanosheets with 5, 10, and 20 layers in thickness. The slope of the traces around zero deformation is marked by a dotted line. (b) Effective spring constant as a function of the thickness measured for 31 MoS2 suspended nanosheets with thickness ranging from 25 down to 5 layers. Data points sharing color and symbol correspond to suspended nanosheets from the same MoS2 flake. The solid black line shows the calculated relationship with Equation 2 using E = 0.30 TPa and T = 0.15 N/m. The gray area around the solid black line indicates the uncertainty of E and T: ΔE = ± 0.10 TPa and ΔT = ± 0.15 N/m.