High-order superlattices by rolling up van der Waals heterostructures

Two-dimensional (2D) materials 1 , 2 and the associated van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures 3 – 7 have provided great flexibility for integrating distinct atomic layers beyond the traditional limits of lattice-matching requirements, through layer-by-layer mechanical restacking or sequential synthes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2021-03, Vol.591 (7850), p.385-390
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Bei, Wan, Zhong, Liu, Yuan, Xu, Junqing, Yang, Xiangdong, Shen, Dingyi, Zhang, Zucheng, Guo, Chunhao, Qian, Qi, Li, Jia, Wu, Ruixia, Lin, Zhaoyang, Yan, Xingxu, Li, Bailing, Zhang, Zhengwei, Ma, Huifang, Li, Bo, Chen, Xiao, Qiao, Yi, Shakir, Imran, Almutairi, Zeyad, Wei, Fei, Zhang, Yue, Pan, Xiaoqing, Huang, Yu, Ping, Yuan, Duan, Xidong, Duan, Xiangfeng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Two-dimensional (2D) materials 1 , 2 and the associated van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures 3 – 7 have provided great flexibility for integrating distinct atomic layers beyond the traditional limits of lattice-matching requirements, through layer-by-layer mechanical restacking or sequential synthesis. However, the 2D vdW heterostructures explored so far have been usually limited to relatively simple heterostructures with a small number of blocks 8 – 18 . The preparation of high-order vdW superlattices with larger number of alternating units is exponentially more difficult, owing to the limited yield and material damage associated with each sequential restacking or synthesis step 8 – 29 . Here we report a straightforward approach to realizing high-order vdW superlattices by rolling up vdW heterostructures. We show that a capillary-force-driven rolling-up process can be used to delaminate synthetic SnS 2 /WSe 2 vdW heterostructures from the growth substrate and produce SnS 2 /WSe 2 roll-ups with alternating monolayers of WSe 2 and SnS 2 , thus forming high-order SnS 2 /WSe 2 vdW superlattices. The formation of these superlattices modulates the electronic band structure and the dimensionality, resulting in a transition of the transport characteristics from semiconducting to metallic, from 2D to one-dimensional (1D), with an angle-dependent linear magnetoresistance. This strategy can be extended to create diverse 2D/2D vdW superlattices, more complex 2D/2D/2D vdW superlattices, and beyond-2D materials, including three-dimensional (3D) thin-film materials and 1D nanowires, to generate mixed-dimensional vdW superlattices, such as 3D/2D, 3D/2D/2D, 1D/2D and 1D/3D/2D vdW superlattices. This study demonstrates a general approach to producing high-order vdW superlattices with widely variable material compositions, dimensions, chirality and topology, and defines a rich material platform for both fundamental studies and technological applications. A simple but flexible technique based on a capillary-force-driven rolling-up process produces high-order van der Waals superlattices that are hard to produce with existing fabrication techniques.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-021-03338-0