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Next-generation, atomically thin devices require in-plane, one-dimensional heterojunctions to electrically connect different two-dimensional (2D) materials. However, the lattice mismatch between most 2D materials leads to unavoidable strain, dislocations, or ripples, which can strongly affect their mechanical, optical, and electronic properties. We have developed an approach to map 2D heterojunction lattice and strain profiles with sub-picometer precision and to identify dislocations and out-of-plane ripples. We collected diffraction patterns from a focused electron beam for each real-space scan position with a high-speed, high dynamic range, momentum-resolved detector - the electron microscope pixel array detector (EMPAD). The resulting four-dimensional (4D) phase space datasets contain the full spatially resolved lattice information of the sample. By using this technique on tungsten disulfide (WS2) and tungsten diselenide (WSe2) lateral heterostructures, we have mapped lattice distortions with 0.3 pm precision across multi-micron fields of view and simultaneously observed the dislocations and ripples responsible for strain relaxation in 2D laterally-epitaxial structures.
2D materials offer an ideal platform to study the strain fields induced by individual atomic defects, yet challenges associated with radiation damage have so-far limited electron microscopy methods to probe these atomic-scale strain fields. Here, we
While digital electronics has become entirely ubiquitous in todays world and appears in the limelight, analogue electronics is still playing a crucial role in many devices and applications. Current analogue circuits are mostly manufactured using sili
Proton radiation damage is an important failure mechanism for electronic devices in near-Earth orbits, deep space and high energy physics facilities. Protons can cause ionizing damage and atomic displacements, resulting in device degradation and malf
With recent advances in dynamic scanning probe microscopy techniques, it is now a routine to image the sub-molecular structure of molecules with atomically-engineered tips which are prepared via controlled modification of the tip termination and are
Defect-free monolayers of graphene and hexagonal boron nitride were previously shown to be surprisingly permeable to thermal protons, despite being completely impenetrable to all gases. It remains untested whether small ions can permeate through the