161 research outputs found
Reliable postprocessing improvement of van der Waals heterostructures
The successful assembly of heterostructures consisting of several layers of
different 2D materials in arbitrary order by exploiting van der Waals forces
has truly been a game changer in the field of low dimensional physics. For
instance, the encapsulation of graphene or MoS2 between atomically flat
hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) layers with strong affinity and graphitic gates
that screen charge impurity disorder provided access to a plethora of
interesting physical phenomena by drastically boosting the device quality. The
encapsulation is accompanied by a self-cleansing effect at the interfaces. The
otherwise predominant charged impurity disorder is minimized and random strain
fluctuations ultimately constitute the main source of residual disorder.
Despite these advances, the fabricated heterostructures still vary notably in
their performance. While some achieve record mobilities, others only possess
mediocre quality. Here, we report a reliable method to improve fully completed
van der Waals heterostructure devices with a straightforward post-processing
surface treatment based on thermal annealing and contact mode AFM. The impact
is demonstrated by comparing magnetotransport measurements before and after the
AFM treatment on one and the same device as well as on a larger set of treated
and untreated devices to collect device statistics. Both the low temperature
properties as well as the room temperature electrical characteristics, as
relevant for applications, improve on average substantially. We surmise that
the main beneficial effect arises from reducing nanometer scale corrugations at
the interfaces, i.e. the detrimental impact of random strain fluctuations
Structural Attributes and Photodynamics of Visible Spectrum Quantum Emitters in Hexagonal Boron Nitride
Newly discovered van der Waals materials like MoS2, WSe2, hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), and recently C2N have sparked intensive research to unveil the quantum behavior associated with their 2D structure. Of great interest are 2D materials that host single quantum emitters. h-BN, with a band gap of 5.95 eV, has been shown to host single quantum emitters which are stable at room temperature in the UV and visible spectral range. In this paper we investigate correlations between h-BN structural features and emitter location from bulk down to the monolayer at room temperature. We demonstrate that chemical etching and ion irradiation can generate emitters in h-BN. We analyze the emitters' spectral features and show that they are dominated by the interaction of their electronic transition with a single Raman active mode of h-BN. Photodynamics analysis reveals diverse rates between the electronic states of the emitter. The emitters show excellent photo stability even under ambient conditions and in monolayers. Comparing the excitation polarization between different emitters unveils a connection between defect orientation and the h-BN hexagonal structure. The sharp spectral features, color diversity, room-temperature stability, long-lived metastable states, ease of fabrication, proximity of the emitters to the environment, outstanding chemical stability, and biocompatibility of h-BN provide a completely new class of systems that can be used for sensing and quantum photonics applications
Neurotransmitter Detection Using Corona Phase Molecular Recognition on Fluorescent Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Sensors
ABSTRACT: Temporal and spatial changes in neurotransmitter concentrations are central to information processing in neural networks. Therefore, biosensors for neurotransmitters are essential tools for neuroscience. In this work, we applied a new technique, corona phase molecular recognition (CoPhMoRe), to identify adsorbed polymer phases on fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) that allow for the selective detection of specific neurotransmitters, including dopamine. We functionalized and suspended SWCNTs with a library of different polymers (n = 30) containing phospholipids, nucleic acids, and amphiphilic polymers to study how neurotransmitters modulate the resulting band gap, near-infrared (nIR) fluorescence of the SWCNT. We identified several corona phases that enable the selective detection of neurotransmitters. Catecholamines such as dopamine increased the fluorescence of specific single-stranded DNA- and RNA-wrapped SWCNTs by 58−80 % upon addition of 100 μM dopamine depending on the SWCNT chirality (n,m). In solution, the limit of detection was 11 nM [Kd = 433 nM for (GT)15 DNA-wrapped SWCNTs]. Mechanistic studies revealed that this turn-on response is due to an increase in fluorescence quantum yield and not covalent modification of the SWCNT or scavenging o
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