Black Arsenic: A Layered Semiconductor with Extreme In‐Plane Anisotropy

2D layered materials have emerged in recent years as a new platform to host novel electronic, optical, or excitonic physics and develop unprecedented nanoelectronic and energy applications. By definition, these materials are strongly anisotropic between the basal plane and cross the plane. The struc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced materials (Weinheim) 2018-07, Vol.30 (30), p.e1800754-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Yabin, Chen, Chaoyu, Kealhofer, Robert, Liu, Huili, Yuan, Zhiquan, Jiang, Lili, Suh, Joonki, Park, Joonsuk, Ko, Changhyun, Choe, Hwan Sung, Avila, José, Zhong, Mianzeng, Wei, Zhongming, Li, Jingbo, Li, Shushen, Gao, Hongjun, Liu, Yunqi, Analytis, James, Xia, Qinglin, Asensio, Maria C., Wu, Junqiao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:2D layered materials have emerged in recent years as a new platform to host novel electronic, optical, or excitonic physics and develop unprecedented nanoelectronic and energy applications. By definition, these materials are strongly anisotropic between the basal plane and cross the plane. The structural and property anisotropies inside their basal plane, however, are much less investigated. Black phosphorus, for example, is a 2D material that has such in‐plane anisotropy. Here, a rare chemical form of arsenic, called black‐arsenic (b‐As), is reported as a cousin of black phosphorus, as an extremely anisotropic layered semiconductor. Systematic characterization of the structural, electronic, thermal, and electrical properties of b‐As single crystals is performed, with particular focus on its anisotropies along two in‐plane principle axes, armchair (AC) and zigzag (ZZ). The analysis shows that b‐As exhibits higher or comparable electronic, thermal, and electric transport anisotropies between the AC and ZZ directions than any other known 2D crystals. Such extreme in‐plane anisotropies can potentially implement novel ideas for scientific research and device applications. A rare chemical form of arsenic, called black‐arsenic (b‐As), is an extremely anisotropic layered semiconductor. Systematic characterization shows that b‐As exhibits higher or comparable electronic, thermal, and electric transport anisotropies between armchair and zigzag directions than any other known layered crystals. Such extreme in‐plane anisotropies are able to potentially implement novel ideas for scientific research and device applications.
ISSN:0935-9648
1521-4095
DOI:10.1002/adma.201800754