27 research outputs found
Measuring the Local Twist Angle and Layer Arrangement in Van der Waals Heterostructures
The properties of Van der Waals heterostructures are determined by the twist
angle and the interface between adjacent layers as well as their polytype and
stacking. Here we describe the use of spectroscopic Low Energy Electron
Microscopy (LEEM) and micro Low Energy Electron Diffraction ({\mu}LEED) methods
to measure these properties locally. We present results on a MoS/hBN
heterostructure, but the methods are applicable to other materials. Diffraction
spot analysis is used to assess the benefits of using hBN as a substrate. In
addition, by making use of the broken rotational symmetry of the lattice, we
determine the cleaving history of the MoS flake, i.e., which layer stems
from where in the bulk
Non-Abelian topological defects and strain mapping in 2D moir\'e materials
We present a general method to analyze the topological nature of the domain
boundary connectivity that appeared in relaxed moir\'e superlattice patterns at
the interface of 2-dimensional (2D) van der Waals (vdW) materials. At large
enough moir\'e lengths, all moir\'e systems relax into commensurated 2D domains
separated by networks of dislocation lines. The nodes of the 2D dislocation
line network can be considered as vortex-like topological defects. We find that
a simple analogy to common topological systems with an order parameter,
such as a superconductor or planar ferromagnet, cannot correctly capture the
topological nature of these defects. For example, in twisted bilayer graphene,
the order parameter space for the relaxed moir\'e system is homotopy equivalent
to a punctured torus. Here, the nodes of the 2D dislocation network can be
characterized as elements of the fundamental group of the punctured torus, the
free group on two generators, endowing these network nodes with non-Abelian
properties. Extending this analysis to consider moir\'e patterns generated from
any relative strain, we find that antivortices occur in the presence of
anisotropic heterostrain, such as shear or anisotropic expansion, while arrays
of vortices appear under twist or isotropic expansion between vdW materials.
Experimentally, utilizing the dark field imaging capability of transmission
electron microscopy (TEM), we demonstrate the existence of vortex and
antivortex pair formation in a moir\'e system, caused by competition between
different types of heterostrains in the vdW interfaces. We also present a
methodology for mapping the underlying heterostrain of a moir\'e structure from
experimental TEM data, which provides a quantitative relation between the
various components of heterostrain and vortex-antivortex density in moir\'e
systems.Comment: 15 pages with 11 figure
Bespoke Nanoparticle Synthesis and Chemical Knowledge Discovery Via Autonomous Experimentations
The optimization of nanomaterial synthesis using numerous synthetic variables
is considered to be extremely laborious task because the conventional
combinatorial explorations are prohibitively expensive. In this work, we report
an autonomous experimentation platform developed for the bespoke design of
nanoparticles (NPs) with targeted optical properties. This platform operates in
a closed-loop manner between a batch synthesis module of NPs and a UV- Vis
spectroscopy module, based on the feedback of the AI optimization modeling.
With silver (Ag) NPs as a representative example, we demonstrate that the
Bayesian optimizer implemented with the early stopping criterion can
efficiently produce Ag NPs precisely possessing the desired absorption spectra
within only 200 iterations (when optimizing among five synthetic reagents). In
addition to the outstanding material developmental efficiency, the analysis of
synthetic variables further reveals a novel chemistry involving the effects of
citrate in Ag NP synthesis. The amount of citrate is a key to controlling the
competitions between spherical and plate-shaped NPs and, as a result, affects
the shapes of the absorption spectra as well. Our study highlights both
capabilities of the platform to enhance search efficiencies and to provide a
novel chemical knowledge by analyzing datasets accumulated from the autonomous
experimentations
Dual-gated graphene devices for near-field nano-imaging
Graphene-based heterostructures display a variety of phenomena that are
strongly tunable by electrostatic local gates. Monolayer graphene (MLG)
exhibits tunable surface plasmon polaritons, as revealed by scanning
nano-infrared experiments. In bilayer graphene (BLG), an electronic gap is
induced by a perpendicular displacement field. Gapped BLG is predicted to
display unusual effects such as plasmon amplification and domain wall plasmons
with significantly larger lifetime than MLG. Furthermore, a variety of
correlated electronic phases highly sensitive to displacement fields have been
observed in twisted graphene structures. However, applying perpendicular
displacement fields in nano-infrared experiments has only recently become
possible (Ref. 1). In this work, we fully characterize two approaches to
realizing nano-optics compatible top-gates: bilayer and MLG. We
perform nano-infrared imaging on both types of structures and evaluate their
strengths and weaknesses. Our work paves the way for comprehensive near-field
experiments of correlated phenomena and plasmonic effects in graphene-based
heterostructures
Atomic and electronic reconstruction at van der Waals interface in twisted bilayer graphene
Control of the interlayer twist angle in two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals
(vdW) heterostructures enables one to engineer a quasiperiodic moir\'e
superlattice of tunable length scale. In twisted bilayer graphene (TBG), the
simple moir\'e superlattice band description suggests that the electronic band
width can be tuned to be comparable to the vdW interlayer interaction at a
'magic angle', exhibiting strongly correlated behavior. However, the vdW
interlayer interaction can also cause significant structural reconstruction at
the interface by favoring interlayer commensurability, which competes with the
intralayer lattice distortion. Here we report the atomic scale reconstruction
in TBG and its effect on the electronic structure. We find a gradual transition
from incommensurate moir\'e structure to an array of commensurate domain
structures as we decrease the twist angle across the characteristic crossover
angle, ~1\deg. In the twist regime smaller than where the
atomic and electronic reconstruction become significant, a simple moir\'e band
description breaks down. Upon applying a transverse electric field, we observe
electronic transport along the network of one-dimensional (1D) topological
channels that surround the alternating triangular gapped domains, providing a
new pathway to engineer the system with continuous tunability
Broken mirror symmetry in excitonic response of reconstructed domains in twisted MoSe/MoSe bilayers
Structural engineering of van der Waals heterostructures via stacking and
twisting has recently been used to create moir\'e superlattices, enabling the
realization of new optical and electronic properties in solid-state systems. In
particular, moir\'e lattices in twisted bilayers of transition metal
dichalcogenides (TMDs) have been shown to lead to exciton trapping, host Mott
insulating and superconducting states, and act as unique Hubbard systems whose
correlated electronic states can be detected and manipulated optically.
Structurally, these twisted heterostructures also feature atomic reconstruction
and domain formation. Unfortunately, due to the nanoscale sizes (~10 nm) of
typical moir\'e domains, the effects of atomic reconstruction on the electronic
and excitonic properties of these heterostructures could not be investigated
systematically and have often been ignored. Here, we use near-0 twist angle
MoSe/MoSe bilayers with large rhombohedral AB/BA domains to directly
probe excitonic properties of individual domains with far-field optics. We show
that this system features broken mirror/inversion symmetry, with the AB and BA
domains supporting interlayer excitons with out-of-plane (z) electric dipole
moments in opposite directions. The dipole orientation of ground-state
-K interlayer excitons (X) can be flipped with electric fields,
while higher-energy K-K interlayer excitons (X) undergo
field-asymmetric hybridization with intralayer K-K excitons (X). Our study
reveals the profound impacts of crystal symmetry on TMD excitons and points to
new avenues for realizing topologically nontrivial systems, exotic
metasurfaces, collective excitonic phases, and quantum emitter arrays via
domain-pattern engineering.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures in main text, 6 figures in supplementary
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