32 research outputs found
1D-confined crystallization routes for tungsten phosphides
Topological materials confined in one-dimension (1D) can transform computing
technologies, such as 1D topological semimetals for nanoscale interconnects and
1D topological superconductors for fault-tolerant quantum computing. As such,
understanding crystallization of 1D-confined topological materials is critical.
Here, we demonstrate 1D-confined crystallization routes during
template-assisted nanowire synthesis where we observe diameter-dependent phase
selectivity for topological metal tungsten phosphides. A phase bifurcation
occurs to produce tungsten monophosphide and tungsten diphosphide at the
cross-over nanowire diameter of ~ 35 nm. Four-dimensional scanning transmission
electron microscopy was used to identify the two phases and to map
crystallographic orientations of grains at a few nm resolution. The 1D-confined
phase selectivity is attributed to the minimization of the total surface
energy, which depends on the nanowire diameter and chemical potentials of
precursors. Theoretical calculations were carried out to construct the
diameter-dependent phase diagram, which agrees with experimental observations.
Our find-ings suggest a new crystallization route to stabilize topological
materials confined in 1D.Comment: 5 figure
Topological Metal MoP Nanowire for Interconnect
The increasing resistance of Cu interconnects for decreasing dimensions is a
major challenge in continued downscaling of integrated circuits beyond the 7-nm
technology node as it leads to unacceptable signal delays and power consumption
in computing. The resistivity of Cu increases due to electron scattering at
surfaces and grain boundaries of the interconnects at the nanoscale.
Topological semimetals, owing to their topologically protected surface states
and suppressed electron backscattering, are promising material candidates to
potentially replace current Cu interconnects as low-resistance interconnects.
Here, we report the attractive resistivity scaling of topological metal MoP
nanowires and show that the resistivity values are comparable to those of Cu
interconnects below 500 nm cross-section areas. More importantly, we
demonstrate that the dimensional scaling of MoP nanowires, in terms of line
resistance versus total cross-sectional area, is superior to those of effective
Cu and barrier-less Ru interconnects, suggesting MoP is an attractive solution
to the current scaling challenge of Cu interconnects.Comment: 4 figure
Atomically thin three-dimensional membranes of van der Waals semiconductors by wafer-scale growth
We report wafer-scale growth of atomically thin, three-dimensional (3D) van der Waals (vdW) semiconductor membranes. By controlling the growth kinetics in the near-equilibrium limit during metal-organic chemical vapor depositions of MoS2 and WS2 monolayer (ML) crystals, we have achieved conformal ML coverage on diverse 3D texture substrates, such as periodic arrays of nanoscale needles and trenches on quartz and SiO2/Si substrates. The ML semiconductor properties, such as channel resistivity and photoluminescence, are verified to be seamlessly uniform over the 3D textures and are scalable to wafer scale. In addition, we demonstrated that these 3D films can be easily delaminated from the growth substrates to form suspended 3D semiconductor membranes. Our work suggests that vdW ML semiconductor films can be useful platforms for patchable membrane electronics with atomic precision, yet large areas, on arbitrary substrates.11Ysciescopu
Interlayer orientation-dependent light absorption and emission in monolayer semiconductor stacks
Two-dimensional stacks of dissimilar hexagonal monolayers exhibit unusual electronic, photonic and photovoltaic responses that arise from substantial interlayer excitations. Interband excitation phenomena in individual hexagonal monolayer occur in states at band edges (valleys) in the hexagonal momentum space; therefore, low-energy interlayer excitation in the hexagonal monolayer stacks can be directed by the two-dimensional rotational degree of each monolayer crystal. However, this rotation-dependent excitation is largely unknown, due to lack in control over the relative monolayer rotations, thereby leading to momentum-mismatched interlayer excitations. Here, we report that light absorption and emission in MoS2/WS2 monolayer stacks can be tunable from indirect- to direct-gap transitions in both spectral and dynamic characteristics, when the constituent monolayer crystals are coherently stacked without in-plane rotation misfit. Our study suggests that the interlayer rotational attributes determine tunable interlayer excitation as a new set of basis for investigating optical phenomena in a two-dimensional hexagonal monolayer system.open115850sciescopu