| Literature DB >> 29686277 |
Shisheng Li1,2,3, Yung-Chang Lin4, Wen Zhao5, Jing Wu6, Zhuo Wang7,8,9, Zehua Hu7,8, Youde Shen10, Dai-Ming Tang11, Junyong Wang7,8, Qi Zhang8, Hai Zhu12, Leiqiang Chu7,8, Weijie Zhao7,8, Chang Liu13, Zhipei Sun14,15, Takaaki Taniguchi11, Minoru Osada11,16, Wei Chen7,8,12, Qing-Hua Xu12, Andrew Thye Shen Wee7,8, Kazu Suenaga4,17, Feng Ding5,18, Goki Eda19,20,21.
Abstract
Chemical vapour deposition of two-dimensional materials typically involves the conversion of vapour precursors to solid products in a vapour-solid-solid mode. Here, we report the vapour-liquid-solid growth of monolayer MoS2, yielding highly crystalline ribbons with a width of few tens to thousands of nanometres. This vapour-liquid-solid growth is triggered by the reaction between MoO3 and NaCl, which results in the formation of molten Na-Mo-O droplets. These droplets mediate the growth of MoS2 ribbons in the 'crawling mode' when saturated with sulfur. The locally well-defined orientations of the ribbons reveal the regular horizontal motion of the droplets during growth. Using atomic-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy and second harmonic generation microscopy, we show that the ribbons are grown homoepitaxially on monolayer MoS2 with predominantly 2H- or 3R-type stacking. Our findings highlight the prospects for the controlled growth of atomically thin nanostructure arrays for nanoelectronic devices and the development of unique mixed-dimensional structures.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29686277 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-018-0055-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841