| Literature DB >> 29045121 |
Torben Daeneke1, Paul Atkin1, Rebecca Orrell-Trigg1, Ali Zavabeti1, Taimur Ahmed1, Sumeet Walia1, Maning Liu2, Yasuhiro Tachibana2, Maria Javaid3, Andrew D Greentree3, Salvy P Russo3, Richard B Kaner4, Kourosh Kalantar-Zadeh1.
Abstract
Atomically thin semiconductors are one of the fastest growing categories in materials science due to their promise to enable high-performance electronic and optical devices. Furthermore, a host of intriguing phenomena have been reported to occur when a semiconductor is confined within two dimensions. However, the synthesis of large area atomically thin materials remains as a significant technological challenge. Here we report a method that allows harvesting monolayer of semiconducting stannous oxide nanosheets (SnO) from the interfacial oxide layer of liquid tin. The method takes advantage of van der Waals forces occurring between the interfacial oxide layer and a suitable substrate that is brought into contact with the molten metal. Due to the liquid state of the metallic precursor, the surface oxide sheet can be delaminated with ease and on a large scale. The SnO monolayer is determined to feature p-type semiconducting behavior with a bandgap of ∼4.2 eV. Field effect transistors based on monolayer SnO are demonstrated. The synthetic technique is facile, scalable and holds promise for creating atomically thin semiconductors at wafer scale.Entities:
Keywords: SnO; liquid metal; p-type; stannous oxide; two-dimensional materials
Year: 2017 PMID: 29045121 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b04856
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881