The triangular pattern formed by the 2D material chalcogenide can help create multifunctional devices.
Researchers at at Vanderbilt University have developed a process for naturally producing patterned monolayers that act as a base for creating a wide variety of novel materials with dual, optical, magnetic, catalytic or sensing abilities. The result is 2D materials that can multitask.
“Patterned materials open up the possibility of having two functionalities in a single material, such as catalysing a chemical reaction while simultaneously serving as a sensor for a second set of molecules,” said Sokrates Pantelides, William and Nancy McMinn Professor of Physics at Vanderbilt University, who coordinated the research with Professor Hong-Jun Gao at the Institute of Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. “Of course, you can do such a thing by using two materials side by side, but patterned materials offer a whole range of new options for device designers.”
Figure 1: llustration of the triangular pattern formed by the two-dimensional material chalcogenide that allows the creation of dual-function devices.
In electronics, 2D materials are a hot topic because of their many potential applications. Graphene, which consists of a single sheet of carbon atoms, has received the most attention, but it has proven difficult to tune its chemical and electrical properties.
As a result, chalcogenides—materials that contain sulphur, selenium or tellurium, which are known for their widely varied optical, electrical and thermal properties—are now the focus of research because some of them naturally form monolayers that serve as blank slates for further tailoring towards specific applications.
Pantelides and his collaborators have shown that monolayers formed by two chalcogenides (platinum-selenium and copper-selenium) naturally combine with nanoscale precision into alternating triangles with different phases: metallic and semiconductor. Because each phase has different electrical and chemical properties, two different types of molecules can bond to its surface, allowing it to perform two functions simultaneously.
“In general, 2D materials are ‘functionalised’ for specific applications by adsorbing different species of atoms or molecules on them or by embedding impurities in their otherwise perfect crystalline structure in the same way that semiconductors such as silicon are functionalised by doping with impurities, which enables the fabrication of electronic devices, such as the ‘chips’ that drive computers,” Pantelides explained. “Our new paper extends the realm of 2D materials by one important step. It demonstrates a way to fabricate 2D materials that allows the two phases of the material to be functionalised independently.”
The experiments were conducted in Gao’s laboratory in Beijing and theoretical calculations were performed at Vanderbilt, the US Department of Energy’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Centre and the University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.