| Literature DB >> 34158488 |
Elmar Mitterreiter1,2, Bruno Schuler3,4, Ana Micevic1,2, Daniel Hernangómez-Pérez5, Katja Barthelmi1,2, Katherine A Cochrane3, Jonas Kiemle1,2, Florian Sigger1,2, Julian Klein1,6, Edward Wong3, Edward S Barnard3, Kenji Watanabe7, Takashi Taniguchi8, Michael Lorke9,10, Frank Jahnke10, Johnathan J Finley1,2, Adam M Schwartzberg3, Diana Y Qiu11, Sivan Refaely-Abramson5, Alexander W Holleitner12,13, Alexander Weber-Bargioni14, Christoph Kastl15,16.
Abstract
For two-dimensional (2D) layered semiconductors, control over atomic defects and understanding of their electronic and optical functionality represent major challenges towards developing a mature semiconductor technology using such materials. Here, we correlate generation, optical spectroscopy, atomic resolution imaging, and ab initio theory of chalcogen vacancies in monolayer MoS2. Chalcogen vacancies are selectively generated by in-vacuo annealing, but also focused ion beam exposure. The defect generation rate, atomic imaging and the optical signatures support this claim. We discriminate the narrow linewidth photoluminescence signatures of vacancies, resulting predominantly from localized defect orbitals, from broad luminescence features in the same spectral range, resulting from adsorbates. Vacancies can be patterned with a precision below 10 nm by ion beams, show single photon emission, and open the possibility for advanced defect engineering of 2D semiconductors at the ultimate scale.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34158488 PMCID: PMC8219741 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24102-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Optical emission induced by adsorbates and engineered point defects in single-layer MoS2.
a Schematic of as-exfoliated single layer MoS2 on hBN (green) supported on a Si/SiO2 substrate (gray). Black (yellow) dots denote molybdenum (sulfur) atoms. Red dots denote oxygen atoms, which are present either as part of adsorbates or as substitutional atoms on sulfur sites. b Heating the substrate to mild annealing temperatures (Tannealing < 500 K, orange) removes the absorbates. c Heating the substrates to high annealing temperatures (Tannealing > 500 K, red) creates sulfur vacancies by thermal desorption (arrows). d Schematic of vacancy generation in MoS2 fully encapsulated in hBN through He-ion (He+) bombardment. e Evolution of low-temperature (T ∼20 K) photoluminescence spectra. As-exfoliated MoS2 exhibits a broad sub-gap luminescence (L-band) due to adsorbates. Mild annealing at Tannealing = 500 K removes these adsorbates suppressing the L-band. Upon annealing at Tannealing = 800 K, a narrow defect luminescence at 1.75 eV emerges (XL), due to the thermal generation of sulfur vacancies with well-defined in-gap states. Vertical, dashed lines indicate the emission energy of the neutral exciton (0XA), the trion (−XA), and XL. The intensities are normalized to the exciton transition 0XA. Helium-ion (He+) irradiation of MoS2 encapsulated in hBN using a helium ion microscope (HIM) generates a similar defect feature at 1.75 eV (T = 4.2 K).
Fig. 2Evolution of MoS2 low-temperature PL with increasing annealing temperature.
a Compared to as-exfoliated MoS2 on hBN (top panel) the broad L-band is strongly reduced after successive mild annealing. At 510 K, an emission line XL appears at 1.75 eV (bottom panel). The spectra were normalized to the intensity of the exciton to highlight relative changes between the L-band, the trion and the free exciton emission. b PL spectra of fully encapsulated MoS2. With increasing annealing temperature, the intensity of XL increases. Dashed lines highlight neutral exciton (0XA), trion (−XA), and XL. The spectra are presented as measured without further normalization. c Integrated intensity of the L-band in a as function of annealing temperature. The change in L-band emission is related to the desorption rate of adsorbates from the MoS2. d Arrhenius plot of thermal defect generation rate extracted from the change in intensity of XL between subsequent annealing steps, which is denoted as ΔInt(XL). The activation barrier EA extracted from the fit (red line) is (0.71 ± 0.13) eV consistent with formation of sulfur vacancies.
Fig. 3Scanning probe microscopy of sulfur vacancies in single-layer MoS2 on graphene.
a, b Scanning tunneling microscope (STM) images of annealing induced vacancies in the top and bottom sulfur layer. The STM imaging parameters were tip bias Vbias = 450 mV, tunneling current It = 100 pA. c, d Density functional theory (DFT) calculations of 7 × 7 supercell containing one sulfur vacancy. The image displays a constant height slice 4.5 Å above and below the MoS2 layer corresponding to the charge density from sulfur vacancies in the top and bottom sulfur layer, respectively. e, f STM images of He-ion (HIM) induced top and bottom sulfur vacancies. g, h Atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of the top and bottom sulfur vacancies. The centers of the circles highlight the position of the vacancy defect. The pictogram indicates the sulfur lattice (yellow dots).
Fig. 4Defect bound excitons in monolayer MoS2.
a Quasiparticle conduction (CB) and valence (VB) bands (black) near K-points and K′-points in the Brillouin zone of single-layer MoS2. The red lines denote states arising from sulfur vacancy levels. Arrows highlight the three types of excitonic transitions: between the delocalized bands (0XA), between the localized defect states only (D2) and between the valence band and the localized defect state (D1). b Band contribution to exciton transitions computed with GW-BSE. Dot size represents the relative oscillator strength, and the probability amplitudes of the occupied and empty bands contributing to it. Black indicates delocalized band states and red indicates localized defect states. CB0 and VB0, VB1 denote the dispersive unoccupied conduction and occupied valence bands (above and below the Fermi level), respectively. CD1 and CD2 are unoccupied localized defect levels, split by spin–orbit interaction arising from conduction band states. VD is the occupied localized defect level arising from the valence band. The three main peaks regions assigned with the D1, D2, and 0XA transitions are marked with dashed lines. c PL spectra of annealed and HIM-treated MoS2. The defect emissions occur in a range of 0.2–0.3 eV below XA with a dominant emission line (XL) around 1.75 eV. Further features (red arrows) are resolved at even larger detuning from the free exciton, in qualitative agreement with the predicted continuum of excitonic defect states below the pristine optical gap. d A single He-ion induced emitter shows no detectable valley polarization (T = 10 K, excitation energy 2.1 eV) as expected for transitions involving only defect levels (D2).