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The exotic properties of two-dimensional (2D) materials and 2D heterostructures, built by forming heterogeneous multi-layered stacks, have been widely explored across a number of subject matters following the goal to invent, design, and improve applications enabled by 2D materials. To successfully harvest these unique properties effectively and increase the yield of manufacturing 2D material-based devices for achieving reliable and repeatable results is the current challenge. The scientific community has introduced various experimental transfer systems explained in detail for exfoliated 2D materials, however, the field lacks statistical analysis and the capability of producing a transfer technique enabling; i) high transfer precision and yield, ii) cross-contamination free transfer, iii) multi-substrate transfer, and iv) rapid prototyping without wet chemistry. Here we introduce a novel 2D material deterministic transfer system and experimentally show its high accuracy, reliability, repeatability, and non-contaminating transfer features by demonstrating fabrication of 2D material-based optoelectronic devices featuring novel device physics and unique functionality. Such rapid and material-near prototyping capability can accelerate not only layered material science in discovery but also engineering innovations.
Van der Waals heterostructures formed by two different monolayer semiconductors have emerged as a promising platform for new optoelectronic and spin/valleytronic applications. In addition to its atomically thin nature, a two-dimensional semiconductor
We examine the impact of quantum confinement on the interaction potential between two charges in two-dimensional semiconductor nanosheets in solution. The resulting effective potential depends on two length scales, namely the thickness $d$ and an eme
We report experimental observation of an unexpectedly large thermopower in mesoscopic two-dimensional (2D) electron systems on GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures at sub-Kelvin temperatures and zero magnetic field. Unlike conventional non-magnetic high-mobi
We use an ab-initio approach to design and study a novel two-dimensional material - a planar array of carbon nanotubes separated by an optimal distance defined by the van der Waals interaction. We show that the energy spectrum for an array of quasi-m
A Dirac electron system in solids mimics a relativistic quantum physics that is compatible with Maxwells equations, by which we anticipate unified electromagnetic responses. We find a large orbital diamagnetism only along the interplane direction and