TY - JOUR
T1 - Atomically asymmetric inversion scales up to mesoscopic single-crystal monolayer flakes
AU - Cheng, Zhihai
AU - Ji, Wei
AU - Xu, Rui
AU - Pang, Fei
AU - Pan, Yuhao
AU - Lun, Yingzhuo
AU - Meng, Lan
AU - Zheng, Zhiyue
AU - Xu, Kunqi
AU - Lei, Le
AU - Hussain, Sabir
AU - Li, Yan Jun
AU - Sugawara, Yasuhiro
AU - Hong, Jiawang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/10/27
Y1 - 2020/10/27
N2 - Symmetry is highly relevant with various quantities and phenomena in physics. While the translational symmetry breaks at the edges of two-dimensional hexagonal crystalline flakes, it is usually associated with the breaking of central inversion symmetry that is yet to be observed in terms of physical properties. Here, we report an experiment-theory joint study on inplane compressed single-crystal monolayer WS2 flakes. Although the flakes show a hexagonal appearance with a C6 symmetry, our density functional theory calculations predict that their in-plane strain, geometric structure, work-function, energy bandgap, and mechanical modulus are nonequivalent among the triangular regions with different edge terminations at the atomic scale, and the flakes exhibit self-patterns with a C3 symmetry. Such nonequivalence of physical properties and concomitant self-patterns persist even in a 50 μm-sized monolayer WS2, observed using atomic force microscopy. This indicates that the symmetry arising from the atomic geometry could preserve up to tens of microns for both geometric and properties of the flake, regardless of its mesoscopic geometry, i.e., C6 here. Such a detectable mesoscopic scale and symmetric nano- to mesoscale patterns provide promising building blocks for 2D materials and devices and also allow edge terminations of 2D flakes to be directly distinguished.
AB - Symmetry is highly relevant with various quantities and phenomena in physics. While the translational symmetry breaks at the edges of two-dimensional hexagonal crystalline flakes, it is usually associated with the breaking of central inversion symmetry that is yet to be observed in terms of physical properties. Here, we report an experiment-theory joint study on inplane compressed single-crystal monolayer WS2 flakes. Although the flakes show a hexagonal appearance with a C6 symmetry, our density functional theory calculations predict that their in-plane strain, geometric structure, work-function, energy bandgap, and mechanical modulus are nonequivalent among the triangular regions with different edge terminations at the atomic scale, and the flakes exhibit self-patterns with a C3 symmetry. Such nonequivalence of physical properties and concomitant self-patterns persist even in a 50 μm-sized monolayer WS2, observed using atomic force microscopy. This indicates that the symmetry arising from the atomic geometry could preserve up to tens of microns for both geometric and properties of the flake, regardless of its mesoscopic geometry, i.e., C6 here. Such a detectable mesoscopic scale and symmetric nano- to mesoscale patterns provide promising building blocks for 2D materials and devices and also allow edge terminations of 2D flakes to be directly distinguished.
KW - Asymmetric inversion
KW - Atomic force microscopy
KW - Density functional theory
KW - Local electrical properties
KW - Local mechanical properties
KW - Self-patterns
KW - Strain
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85094983884&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.0c06198
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.0c06198
M3 - Article
C2 - 32870662
AN - SCOPUS:85094983884
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 14
SP - 13834
EP - 13840
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 10
ER -