1 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