2 research outputs found
Continuous Growth of Hexagonal Graphene and Boron Nitride In-Plane Heterostructures by Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition
Grapheneâboron nitride monolayer heterostructures contain adjacent electrically active and insulating regions in a continuous, single-atom thick layer. To date structures were grown at low pressure, resulting in irregular shapes and edge direction, so studies of the grapheneâboron nitride interface were restricted to the microscopy of nanodomains. Here we report templated growth of single crystalline hexagonal boron nitride directly from the oriented edge of hexagonal graphene flakes by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition, and physical property measurements that inform the design of in-plane hybrid electronics. Ribbons of boron nitride monolayer were grown from the edge of a graphene template and inherited its crystallographic orientation. The relative sharpness of the interface was tuned through control of growth conditions. Frequent tearing at the grapheneâboron nitride interface was observed, so density functional theory was used to determine that the nitrogen-terminated interface was prone to instability during cool down. The electronic functionality of monolayer heterostructures was demonstrated through fabrication of field effect transistors with boron nitride as an in-plane gate dielectric
Anisotropic Electron-Photon and Electron-Phonon Interactions in Black Phosphorus
Orthorhombic
black phosphorus (BP) and other layered materials, such as gallium
telluride (GaTe) and tin selenide (SnSe), stand out among two-dimensional
(2D) materials owing to their anisotropic in-plane structure. This
anisotropy adds a new dimension to the properties of 2D materials
and stimulates the development of angle-resolved photonics and electronics.
However, understanding the effect of anisotropy has remained unsatisfactory
to date, as shown by a number of inconsistencies in the recent literature.
We use angle-resolved absorption and Raman spectroscopies to investigate
the role of anisotropy on the electronâphoton and electronâphonon
interactions in BP. We highlight, both experimentally and theoretically,
a nontrivial dependence between anisotropy and flake thickness and
photon and phonon energies. We show that once understood, the anisotropic
optical absorption appears to be a reliable and simple way to identify
the crystalline orientation of BP, which cannot be determined from
Raman spectroscopy without the explicit consideration of excitation
wavelength and flake thickness, as commonly used previously