| Literature DB >> 28809534 |
Ming Chen1, Juan Xia2, Jiadong Zhou3, Qingsheng Zeng3, Kaiwei Li1, Kazunori Fujisawa4, Wei Fu3, Ting Zhang1, Jing Zhang1, Zhe Wang1, Zhixun Wang1, Xiaoting Jia5, Mauricio Terrones4, Ze Xiang Shen2, Zheng Liu1,3, Lei Wei1.
Abstract
Thermoplastic polymers subjected to a continuous tensile stress experience a state of mechanical instabilities, resulting in neck formation and propagation. The necking process with strong localized strain enables the transformation of initially brittle polymeric materials into robust, flexible, and oriented forms. Here we harness the polymer-based mechanical instabilities to control the fragmentation of atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). We develop a simple and versatile nanofabrication tool to precisely fragment atom-thin TMDs sandwiched between thermoplastic polymers into ordered and atomically perfect TMD nanoribbons in arbitrary directions regardless of the crystal structures, defect content, and original geometries. This method works for a very broad spectrum of semiconducting TMDs with thicknesses ranging from monolayers to bulk crystals. We also explore the electrical properties of the fabricated monolayer nanoribbon arrays, obtaining an on/off ratio of ∼106 for such MoS2 arrays based field-effect transistors. Furthermore, we demonstrate an improved hydrogen evolution reaction with the resulting monolayer MoS2 nanoribbons, thanks to the largely increased catalytic edge sites formed by this physical fragmentation method. This capability not only enriches the fundamental study of TMD extreme and fragmentation mechanics, but also impacts on future developments of TMD-based devices.Entities:
Keywords: advanced nanomaterials; controlled fragmentation; hydrogen evolution reaction; mechanical instabilities; necking process; transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs)
Year: 2017 PMID: 28809534 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b04158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881