Grains and grian boundaries in highly-crystalline monolayer molybdenum disulfide

ORAL

Abstract

Recent progress in large-area chemical vapor deposition (CVD) synthesis of monolayer molybdenum disulfide, a new two-dimensional direct-bandgap semiconductor, is paving the way for applications in atomically thin electronics. Little is known, however, about the microstructure of this material.~ Here we have refined CVD synthesis to grow highly crystalline islands of monolayer molybdenum disulfide up to 120 micrometers in size with optical and electrical properties comparable or superior to exfoliated samples. Using transmission electron microscopy, we correlate lattice orientation, edge morphology, and crystallinity with island shape to demonstrate that triangular islands are single crystals.~The crystals merge to form faceted tilt and mirror boundaries that are stitched together by lines of 8- and 4- membered rings.~ Density functional theory reveals localized mid-gap states arising from these 8-4 defects. The knowledge gained about grain structure enables systematic studies of the optical, mechanical, and electronic properties of grain boundaries.

Authors

  • Arend M. van der Zande

    • Energy Frontier Research Center, Columbia University
  • Pinshane Y. Huang

    • Cornell University
  • Daniel Chenet

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University, New York, NY
  • YuMeng You

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University, New York, NY
  • Timothy Berkelbach

    • Columbia University
  • Gwan-Hyoung Lee

    • Columbia University
    • Samsung-SKKU Graphene Center (SSGC), Suwon, Korea
  • David Reichman

    • Columbia University
    • Department of Chemistry, Columbia University
  • David A. Muller

    • Cornell University
  • Tony Heinz

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University, New York, NY
  • James Hone

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University, New York, NY
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University
    • Columbia University, NY