TY - JOUR
T1 - Tunable and laser-reconfigurable 2D heterocrystals obtained by epitaxial stacking of crystallographically incommensurate Bi2Se3 and MoS2 atomic layers
AU - Vargas, Anthony
AU - Liu, Fangze
AU - Lane, Christopher
AU - Rubin, Daniel
AU - Bilgin, Ismail
AU - Hennighausen, Zachariah
AU - Decapua, Matthew
AU - Bansil, Arun
AU - Kar, Swastik
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2017 The Authors.
PY - 2017/7/5
Y1 - 2017/7/5
N2 - Vertical stacking is widely viewed as a promising approach for designing advanced functionalities using twodimensional (2D) materials. Combining crystallographically commensurate materials in these 2D stacks has been shown to result in rich new electronic structure, magnetotransport, and optical properties. In this context, vertical stacks of crystallographically incommensurate 2D materials with well-defined crystallographic order are a counterintuitive concept and, hence, fundamentally intriguing. We show that crystallographically dissimilar and incommensurate atomically thin MoS2 and Bi2Se3 layers can form rotationally aligned stacks with longrange crystallographic order. Our first-principles theoretical modeling predicts heterocrystal electronic band structures, which are quite distinct from those of the parent crystals, characterized with an indirect bandgap. Experiments reveal striking optical changes when Bi2Se3 is stacked layer by layer on monolayer MoS2, including 100% photoluminescence (PL) suppression, tunable transmittance edge (1.1→0.75 eV), suppressed Raman, and wide-band evolution of spectral transmittance. Disrupting the interface using a focused laser results in a marked the reversal of PL, Raman, and transmittance, demonstrating for the first time that in situ manipulation of interfaces can enable "reconfigurable" 2D materials. We demonstrate submicrometer resolution, "laserdrawing" and "bit-writing," and novel laser-induced broadband light emission in these heterocrystal sheets.
AB - Vertical stacking is widely viewed as a promising approach for designing advanced functionalities using twodimensional (2D) materials. Combining crystallographically commensurate materials in these 2D stacks has been shown to result in rich new electronic structure, magnetotransport, and optical properties. In this context, vertical stacks of crystallographically incommensurate 2D materials with well-defined crystallographic order are a counterintuitive concept and, hence, fundamentally intriguing. We show that crystallographically dissimilar and incommensurate atomically thin MoS2 and Bi2Se3 layers can form rotationally aligned stacks with longrange crystallographic order. Our first-principles theoretical modeling predicts heterocrystal electronic band structures, which are quite distinct from those of the parent crystals, characterized with an indirect bandgap. Experiments reveal striking optical changes when Bi2Se3 is stacked layer by layer on monolayer MoS2, including 100% photoluminescence (PL) suppression, tunable transmittance edge (1.1→0.75 eV), suppressed Raman, and wide-band evolution of spectral transmittance. Disrupting the interface using a focused laser results in a marked the reversal of PL, Raman, and transmittance, demonstrating for the first time that in situ manipulation of interfaces can enable "reconfigurable" 2D materials. We demonstrate submicrometer resolution, "laserdrawing" and "bit-writing," and novel laser-induced broadband light emission in these heterocrystal sheets.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85043287436&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1126/sciadv.1601741
DO - 10.1126/sciadv.1601741
M3 - Article
C2 - 28740860
AN - SCOPUS:85043287436
SN - 2375-2548
VL - 3
JO - Science advances
JF - Science advances
IS - 7
M1 - e1601741
ER -