Advanced materials | 2019

Interface-Driven Partial Dislocation Formation in 2D Heterostructures.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Van der Waals (vdW) epitaxy allows the fabrication of various heterostructures with dramatically released lattice matching conditions. This study demonstrates interface-driven stacking boundaries in WS2 using epitaxially grown tungsten disulfide (WS2 ) on wrinkled graphene. Graphene wrinkles function as highly reactive nucleation sites on WS2 epilayers; however, they impede lateral growth and induce additional stress in the epilayer due to anisotropic friction. Moreover, partial dislocation-driven in-plane strain facilitates out-of-plane buckling with a height of 1 nm to release in-plane strain. Remarkably, in-plane strain relaxation at partial dislocations restores the bandgap to that of monolayer WS2 due to reduced interlayer interaction. These findings clarify significant substrate morphology effects even in vdW epitaxy and are potentially useful for various applications involving modifying optical and electronic properties by manipulating extended 1D defects via substrate morphology control.

Volume 31 15
Pages \n e1807486\n
DOI 10.1002/adma.201807486
Language English
Journal Advanced materials

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