Growth of 10 × 10 cm<sup>2</sup> single-crystal hexagonal boron nitride monolayer on the symmetry broken substrate

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to grow high-quality large single crystals of essential 2D materials, is at the heart for the industrial applications of 2D devices. Atom-layered hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), with its excellent stability, flat surface and large bandgap, has been reported to be the best 2D insulator. However, the size of single-crystal 2D hBN is still typically less than the wafer scale, mainly due to the extreme difficulties in its single-crystal growth: the three-fold symmetry of hBN lattice leading to antiparallel domains resulting in twin boundaries on most substrates. Here, we report the first epitaxial growth of a 10 × 10 cm2 single-crystal hBN monolayer on a low symmetry Cu(110) “vicinal surface” obtained by annealing an industrial Cu foil. Our experimental and theoretical work indicate that epitaxial growth is made by Cu<211> step-zigzag hBN edge coupling that serves to break the equivalence of antiparallel hBN domains, enabling unidirectional domains alignment of > 99%. The findings in this work can significantly boost the applications of 2D devices, and also pave the way for the epitaxial growth of broad non-centrosymmetric 2D materials, such as various transition metal dichalcogenides, into large-sized single crystals.

Reference:
Li Wang et al., Nature, 2019, 570, 9

Presenters

  • Li Wang

    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Authors

  • Li Wang

    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Xuedong Bai

    • Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    • Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physics
  • Dapeng Yu

    • Southern University of Science and Technology of China
    • Southern University of Science and Technology
    • South University of Science and Technology of China
    • Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Quantum Science and Engineering, and Department of Physics, South University of Science and Technology
  • Enge Wang

    • School of Physics, Peking Universiry
    • International Center for Quantum Materials, Peking University
    • University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, P. R. China, CAS Center for Excellence in Topological Quantum Computation
  • Kaihui Liu

    • School of Physics, Peking Universiry