| Literature DB >> 31740793 |
Tomojit Chowdhury1, Jungkil Kim1, Erick C Sadler1, Chenyang Li2, Seong Won Lee3, Kiyoung Jo4, Weinan Xu5, David H Gracias5, Natalia V Drichko6, Deep Jariwala4, Todd H Brintlinger7, Tim Mueller2, Hong-Gyu Park3, Thomas J Kempa8,9.
Abstract
Two-dimensional transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMD) crystals are a versatile platform for optoelectronic, catalytic and quantum device studies. However, the ability to tailor their physical properties through explicit synthetic control of their morphology and dimensionality is a major challenge. Here we demonstrate a gas-phase synthesis method that substantially transforms the structure and dimensionality of TMD crystals without lithography. Synthesis of MoS2 on Si(001) surfaces pre-treated with phosphine yields high-aspect-ratio nanoribbons of uniform width. We systematically control the width of these nanoribbons between 50 and 430 nm by varying the total phosphine dosage during the surface treatment step. Aberration-corrected electron microscopy reveals that the nanoribbons are predominantly 2H phase with zig-zag edges and an edge quality that is comparable to, or better than, that of graphene and TMD nanoribbons prepared through conventional top-down processing. Owing to their restricted dimensionality, the nominally one-dimensional MoS2 nanocrystals exhibit photoluminescence 50 meV higher in energy than that from two-dimensional MoS2 crystals. Moreover, this emission is precisely tunable through synthetic control of crystal width. Directed crystal growth on designer substrates has the potential to enable the preparation of low-dimensional materials with prescribed morphologies and tunable or emergent optoelectronic properties.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31740793 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-019-0571-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213