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Dive into the research topics where Chanjing Zhou is active.

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Featured researches published by Chanjing Zhou.


Nano Letters | 2015

Manganese Doping of Monolayer MoS2: The Substrate Is Critical

Kehao Zhang; Simin Feng; Junjie Wang; Angelica Azcatl; Ning Lu; Rafik Addou; Nan Wang; Chanjing Zhou; Jordan O. Lerach; Vincent Bojan; Moon J. Kim; Long-Qing Chen; Robert M. Wallace; Mauricio Terrones; J. Zhu; Joshua A. Robinson

Substitutional doping of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) may provide routes to achieving tunable p-n junctions, bandgaps, chemical sensitivity, and magnetism in these materials. In this study, we demonstrate in situ doping of monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) with manganese (Mn) via vapor phase deposition techniques. Successful incorporation of Mn in MoS2 leads to modifications of the band structure as evidenced by photoluminescence and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, but this is heavily dependent on the choice of substrate. We show that inert substrates (i.e., graphene) permit the incorporation of several percent Mn in MoS2, while substrates with reactive surface terminations (i.e., SiO2 and sapphire) preclude Mn incorporation and merely lead to defective MoS2. The results presented here demonstrate that tailoring the substrate surface could be the most significant factor in substitutional doping of TMDs with non-TMD elements.


APL Materials | 2014

Facile synthesis of MoS2 and MoxW1-xS2 triangular monolayers

Zhong Lin; Michael Thee; Ana Laura Elías; Simin Feng; Chanjing Zhou; Kazunori Fujisawa; Nestor Perea-Lopez; Victor Carozo; Humberto Terrones; Mauricio Terrones

Single- and few-layered transition metal dichalcogenides, such as MoS2 and WS2, are emerging two-dimensional materials exhibiting numerous and unusual physico-chemical properties that could be advantageous in the fabrication of unprecedented optoelectronic devices. Here we report a novel and alternative route to synthesize triangular monocrystals of MoS2 and MoxW1-xS2 by annealing MoS2 and MoS2/WO3 precursors, respectively, in the presence of sulfur vapor. In particular, the MoxW1-xS2 triangular monolayers show gradual concentration profiles of W and Mo whereby Mo concentrates in the islands’ center and W is more abundant on the outskirts of the triangular monocrystals. These observations were confirmed by atomic force microscopy, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, as well as Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopy. The presence of tunable PL signals depending on the MoxW1-xS2 stoichiometries in 2D monocrystals opens up a wide range of applications in electronics and optoelectronics.


Science Advances | 2017

Optical identification of sulfur vacancies: Bound excitons at the edges of monolayer tungsten disulfide

Victor Carozo; Yuanxi Wang; Kazunori Fujisawa; Bruno R. Carvalho; Amber McCreary; Simin Feng; Zhong Lin; Chanjing Zhou; Nestor Perea-Lopez; Ana Laura Elías; Bernd Kabius; Vincent H. Crespi; Mauricio Terrones

Bound exciton is a signature of sulfur vacancies, and thus, it can be used to investigate defects in atomically thin materials. Defects play a significant role in tailoring the optical properties of two-dimensional materials. Optical signatures of defect-bound excitons are important tools to probe defective regions and thus interrogate the optical quality of as-grown semiconducting monolayer materials. We have performed a systematic study of defect-bound excitons using photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy combined with atomically resolved scanning electron microscopy and first-principles calculations. Spatially resolved PL spectroscopy at low temperatures revealed bound excitons that were present only on the edges of monolayer tungsten disulfide and not in the interior. Optical pumping of the bound excitons was sublinear, confirming their bound nature. Atomic-resolution images reveal that the areal density of monosulfur vacancies is much larger near the edges (0.92 ± 0.45 nm−2) than in the interior (0.33 ± 0.11 nm−2). Temperature-dependent PL measurements found a thermal activation energy of ~36 meV; surprisingly, this is much smaller than the bound-exciton binding energy of ~300 meV. We show that this apparent inconsistency is related to a thermal dissociation of the bound exciton that liberates the neutral excitons from negatively charged point defects. First-principles calculations confirm that sulfur monovacancies introduce midgap states that host optical transitions with finite matrix elements, with emission energies ranging from 200 to 400 meV below the neutral-exciton emission line. These results demonstrate that bound-exciton emission induced by monosulfur vacancies is concentrated near the edges of as-grown monolayer tungsten disulfide.


2D Materials | 2016

MoS2 monolayers on nanocavities: enhancement in light–matter interaction

Corey Janisch; Haomin Song; Chanjing Zhou; Zhong Lin; Ana Laura Elías; Dengxin Ji; Mauricio Terrones; Qiaoqiang Gan; Zhiwen Liu

Two-dimensional (2D) atomic crystals and van der Waals heterostructures constitute an emerging platform for developing new functional ultra-thin electronic and optoelectronic materials for novel energy-efficient devices. However, in most thin-film optical applications, there is a long-existing trade-off between the effectiveness of light–matter interactions and the thickness of semiconductor materials, especially when the materials are scaled down to atom thick dimensions. Consequently, enhancement strategies can introduce significant advances to these atomically thick materials and devices. Here we demonstrate enhanced absorption and photoluminescence generation from MoS2 monolayers coupled with a planar nanocavity. This nanocavity consists of an alumina nanolayer spacer sandwiched between monolayer MoS2 and an aluminum reflector, and can strongly enhance the light–matter interaction within the MoS2, increasing the exclusive absorption of monolayer MoS2 to nearly 70% at a wavelength of 450 nm. The nanocavity also modifies the spontaneous emission rate, providing an additional design freedom to control the interaction between light and 2D materials.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Negative Differential Conductance & Hot-Carrier Avalanching in Monolayer WS2 FETs

G. He; J. Nathawat; C.-P. Kwan; H. Ramamoorthy; R. Somphonsane; Minzhi Zhao; Kaustabh Ghosh; U. Singisetti; Nestor Perea-Lopez; Chanjing Zhou; Ana Laura Elías; Mauricio Terrones; Yongji Gong; Xiang Zhang; Robert Vajtai; Pulickel M. Ajayan; D. K. Ferry; J. P. Bird

The high field phenomena of inter-valley transfer and avalanching breakdown have long been exploited in devices based on conventional semiconductors. In this Article, we demonstrate the manifestation of these effects in atomically-thin WS2 field-effect transistors. The negative differential conductance exhibits all of the features familiar from discussions of this phenomenon in bulk semiconductors, including hysteresis in the transistor characteristics and increased noise that is indicative of travelling high-field domains. It is also found to be sensitive to thermal annealing, a result that we attribute to the influence of strain on the energy separation of the different valleys involved in hot-electron transfer. This idea is supported by the results of ensemble Monte Carlo simulations, which highlight the sensitivity of the negative differential conductance to the equilibrium populations of the different valleys. At high drain currents (>10 μA/μm) avalanching breakdown is also observed, and is attributed to trap-assisted inverse Auger scattering. This mechanism is not normally relevant in conventional semiconductors, but is possible in WS2 due to the narrow width of its energy bands. The various results presented here suggest that WS2 exhibits strong potential for use in hot-electron devices, including compact high-frequency sources and photonic detectors.


ACS Nano | 2016

Electric-Field-Assisted Directed Assembly of Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Monolayer Sheets

Donna D. Deng; Zhong Lin; Ana Laura Elías; Nestor Perea-Lopez; Jie Li; Chanjing Zhou; Kehao Zhang; Simin Feng; Humberto Terrones; Jeffrey S. Mayer; Joshua A. Robinson; Mauricio Terrones; Theresa S. Mayer

Directed assembly of two-dimensional (2D) layered materials, such as transition metal dichalcogenides, holds great promise for large-scale electronic and optoelectronic applications. Here, we demonstrate controlled placement of solution-suspended monolayer tungsten disulfide (WS2) sheets on a substrate using electric-field-assisted assembly. Micrometer-sized triangular WS2 monolayers are selectively positioned on a lithographically defined interdigitated guiding electrode structure using the dielectrophoretic force induced on the sheets in a nonuniform field. Triangular sheets with sizes comparable to the interelectrode gap assemble with an observed preferential orientation where one side of the triangle spans across the electrode gap. This orientation of the sheets relative to the guiding electrode is confirmed to be the lowest energy configuration using semianalytical calculations. Nearly all sheets assemble without observable physical deformation, and postassembly photoluminescence and Raman spectroscopy characterization of the monolayers reveal that they retain their as-grown crystalline quality. These results show that the field-assisted assembly process may be used for large-area bottom-up integration of 2D monolayer materials for nanodevice applications.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2016

MoS 2 monolayers on nanocavities: Enhanced light-matter interaction within atomic monolayers

Corey Janisch; Haomin Song; Chanjing Zhou; Zhong Lin; Ana Laura Elías; Dengxin Ji; Mauricio Terrones; Qiaoqiang Gan; Zhiwen Liu

We report a fundamental strategy to enhance the light-matter interaction of atomically-thin films based on strong interference in planar nanocavities, which is validated experimentally by absorption and photoluminescence enhancement of MoS2 monolayers.


ACS Nano | 2017

Low-temperature Synthesis of Heterostructures of Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Alloys (WxMo1–xS2) and Graphene with Superior Catalytic Performance for Hydrogen Evolution

Yu Lei; Srimanta Pakhira; Kazunori Fujisawa; Xuyang Wang; Oluwagbenga Oare Iyiola; Néstor Perea López; Ana Laura Elías; Lakshmy Pulickal Rajukumar; Chanjing Zhou; Bernd Kabius; Nasim Alem; Morinobu Endo; Ruitao Lv; Jose L. Mendoza-Cortes; Mauricio Terrones


Nano Letters | 2016

Correction to Manganese Doping of Monolayer MoS2: The Substrate Is Critical

Kehao Zhang; Simin Feng; Junjie Wang; Angelica Azcatl; Ning Lu; Rafik Addou; Nan Wang; Chanjing Zhou; Jordan O. Lerach; Vincent Bojan; Moon J. Kim; Long-Qing Chen; Robert M. Wallace; Mauricio Terrones; J. Zhu; Joshua A. Robinson


Carbon | 2019

Facile 1D graphene fiber synthesis from an agricultural by-product: A silicon-mediated graphenization route

Kazunori Fujisawa; Yu Lei; Carla de Tomas; Irene Suarez-Martinez; Chanjing Zhou; Yu-Chuan Lin; Shruti Subramanian; Ana Laura Elías; Masatsugu Fujishige; Kenji Takeuchi; Joshua A. Robinson; Nigel A. Marks; Morinobu Endo; Mauricio Terrones

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Mauricio Terrones

Pennsylvania State University

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Ana Laura Elías

Pennsylvania State University

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Zhong Lin

Pennsylvania State University

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Simin Feng

Pennsylvania State University

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Nestor Perea-Lopez

Pennsylvania State University

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Victor Carozo

Pennsylvania State University

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Humberto Terrones

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Joshua A. Robinson

Pennsylvania State University

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Bernd Kabius

Argonne National Laboratory

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