Crack Formation induced by the Post-Growth Alloying of Two-Dimensional Transition-Metal Dichalcogenides

ORAL

Abstract

Alloying is a prime method for customizing the opto-electronic properties of two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). In this method, the tuning of the composition ratio (x) in MxM1-xX2 or MX2xX2(1-x) ternary alloys (M, M: transition-metals and X, X: chalcogens) allows for engineering the electronic bandgap and obtaining properties that are not intrinsically available in binary TMDs (i.e., MX2). Ternary compounds can be synthesized via the incorporation of foreign atoms (i.e., M or X) into an already-grown MX2 binary lattice, that is the post-growth alloying of binary crystals.
Here, we show that the post-growth alloying yields strained 2D TMDs with severely disintegrated domains. In a case study (e.g., MoS2xSe2(1-x)), we demonstrate that the starting binary crystal (i.e., MoSe2) fails to adjust its lattice constant as the atoms of the host crystal (i.e., Se) are being replaced by foreign atoms (i.e., S) during the alloying process. Thus, the obtained alloys form in a stretched lattice and experience a larger biaxial strain that relaxes through the formation of cracks. Our calculations demonstrate that pre-existing defects substantially reduce the fracture-inducing strain from 11% (in standard TMD crystals) to a range below 4% in as-synthesized alloys.

Presenters

  • Hossein Taghinejad

    • Electrical Engineering, Georgia Inst of Tech

Authors

  • Hossein Taghinejad

    • Electrical Engineering, Georgia Inst of Tech
  • Ali Eftekhar

    • Electrical Engineering, Georgia Inst of Tech
  • Mohammad Taghinejad

    • Electrical Engineering, Georgia Inst of Tech
  • Yao Zhou

    • Stanford University
    • Materials Sciences and Engineering, Stanford
  • Evan Reed

    • Stanford University
    • Stanford Univ
    • Materials Sciences and Engineering, Stanford
  • Ali Adibi

    • Electrical Engineering, Georgia Inst of Tech