No Arabic abstract
Van der Waals epitaxy on the surface of two-dimensional (2D) layered crystals has gained significant research interest for the assembly of well-ordered nanostructures and fabrication of vertical heterostructures based on 2D crystals. Although van der Waals epitaxial assembly on the hexagonal phase of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) has been relatively well characterized, a comparable study on the distorted octahedral phase (1T or Td) of TMDCs is largely lacking. Here we investigate the assembly behavior of one-dimensional (1D) AgCN microwires on various distorted TMDC crystals, namely 1T-MoTe2, Td-WTe2, and 1T-ReS2. The unidirectional alignment of AgCN chains is observed on these crystals, reflecting the symmetry of underlying distorted TMDCs. Polarized Raman spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy directly confirm that AgCN chains display the remarkable alignment behavior along the distorted chain directions of underlying TMDCs. The observed unidirectional assembly behavior can be attributed to the favorable adsorption configurations of 1D chains along the substrate distortion, which is supported by our theoretical calculations and observation of similar assembly behavior from different cyanide chains. The aligned AgCN microwires can be harnessed as facile markers to identify polymorphs and crystal orientations of TMDCs.
Nonlinear light sources are central to a myriad of applications, driving a quest for their miniaturisation down to the nanoscale. In this quest, nonlinear metasurfaces hold a great promise, as they enhance nonlinear effects through their resonant photonic environment and high refractive index, such as in high-index dielectric metasurfaces. However, despite the sub-diffractive operation of dielectric metasurfaces at the fundamental wave, this condition is not fulfilled for the nonlinearly generated harmonic waves, thereby all nonlinear metasurfaces to date emit multiple diffractive beams. Here, we demonstrate the enhanced single-beam second- and third-harmonic generation in a metasurface of crystalline transition-metal-dichalcogenide material, offering the highest refractive index. We show that the interplay between the resonances of the metasurface allows for tuning of the unidirectional second-harmonic radiation in forward or backward direction, not possible in any bulk nonlinear crystal. Our results open new opportunities for metasurface-based nonlinear light-sources, including nonlinear mirrors and entangled-photon generation.
Using first-principles calculations, we investigate six transition-metal nitride halides (TMNHs): HfNBr, HfNCl, TiNBr, TiNCl, ZrNBr, and ZrNCl as potential van der Waals (vdW) dielectrics for transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) channel transistors. We calculate the exfoliation energies and bulk phonon energies and find that the six TMNHs are exfoliable and thermodynamically stable. We calculate both the optical and static dielectric constants in the in-plane and out-of-plane directions for both monolayer and bulk TMNHs. In monolayers, the out-of-plane static dielectric constant ranges from 5.04 (ZrNCl) to 6.03 (ZrNBr) whereas in-plane dielectric constants range from 13.18 (HfNBr) to 74.52 (TiNCl). We show that the bandgap of TMNHs ranges from 1.53 eV (TiNBr) to 3.36 eV (HfNCl) whereas the affinity ranges from 4.01 eV (HfNBr) to 5.60 eV (TiNCl). Finally, we estimate the dielectric leakage current density of transistors with six TMNH monolayer dielectrics with five monolayer channel TMDs (MoS2, MoSe2, MoTe2, WS2, and WSe2). For p-MOS TMD channel transistors, 19 out of 30 combinations have a smaller leakage current compared to monolayer hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), a well-known vdW dielectric. The smallest monolayer leakage current of 2.14*10-9 A/cm2 is predicted for a p-MOS WS2 transistor with HfNCl as a gate dielectric. HfNBr, HfNCl, ZrNBr, and ZrNCl are also predicted to yield small leakage currents in certain p-MOS TMD transistors.
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are van der Waals layered materials with sizable and tunable bandgaps, offering promising platforms for two-dimensional electronics and optoelectronics. To this end, the bottleneck is how to acquire high-quality single crystals in a facile and efficient manner. As one of the most widely employed method of single-crystal growth, conventional chemical vapor transport (CVT) generally encountered problems including the excess nucleation that leads to small crystal clusters and slow growth rate. To address these issues, a seed crystal is introduced to suppress the nucleation and an inner tube is adopted as both a separator and a flow restrictor, favoring the growth of large-size and high-quality TMD single crystals successfully. Three examples are presented, the effective growth of millimeter-sized MoSe2 and MoTe2 single crystals, and the greatly shortened growth period for PtSe2 single crystal, all of which are synthesized in high quality according to detailed characterizations. The mechanism of seeded CVT is discussed. Furthermore, a phototransistor based on exfoliated multi-layered MoSe2 displays excellent photoresponse in ambient conditions, and considerably rapid rise and fall time of 110 and 125 us are obtained. This work paves the way for developing a facile and versatile method to synthesize high-quality TMD single crystals in laboratory, which could serve as favorable functional materials for potential low-dimensional optoelectronics.
Transition-metal dichalcogenide IrTe2 has attracted attention because of striped lattice, charge ordering and superconductivity. We have investigated the surface structure of IrTe2, using low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). A complex striped lattice modulations as a function of temperature is observed, which shows hysteresis between cooling and warming. While the bulk 5x1 and 8x1 phases appear at high temperatures, the surface ground state has the 6x1 phase, not seen in the bulk, and the surface transition temperatures are distinct from the bulk. The broken symmetry at the surface creates a quite different phase diagram, with the coexistence of several periodicities resembling devils staircase behavior.
When exploring new materials for their potential in (opto)electronic device applications, it is important to understand the role of various carrier interaction and scattering processes. Research on transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors has recently progressed towards the realisation of working devices, which involve light-emitting diodes, nanocavity lasers, and single-photon emitters. In these two-dimensional atomically thin semiconductors, the Coulomb interaction is known to be much stronger than in quantum wells of conventional semiconductors like GaAs, as witnessed by the 50 times larger exciton binding energy. The question arises, whether this directly translates into equivalently faster carrier-carrier Coulomb scattering of excited carriers. Here we show that a combination of ab-initio band-structure and many-body theory predicts carrier relaxation on a 50-fs time scale, which is less than an order of magnitude faster than in quantum wells. These scattering times compete with the recently reported sub-ps exciton recombination times, thus making it harder to achieve population inversion and lasing.