The emergence of atomically thin crystals has allowed
extending
materials integration to lateral heterostructures where different
2D materials are covalently connected in the plane. The concept of
lateral heterostructures can be generalized to thicker layered crystals,
provided that a suitably faceted seed crystal presents edges to which
a compatible second van der Waals material can be attached layer by
layer. Here, we examine the possibility of integrating multilayer
crystals of the group IV monochalcogenides SnS and GeSe, which have
the same crystal structure, small lattice mismatch, and similar bandgaps.
In a two-step growth process, lateral epitaxy of GeSe on the sidewalls
of multilayer SnS flakes (obtained by vapor transport of a SnS2 precursor on graphite) yields heterostructures of laterally
stitched crystalline GeSe and SnS without any detectable vertical
overgrowth of the SnS seeds and with sharp lateral interfaces. Combined
cathodoluminescence spectroscopy and ab initio calculations
show the effects of small band offsets on carrier transport and radiative
recombination near the interface. The results demonstrate the possibility
of forming atomically connected lateral interfaces across many van
der Waals layers, which is promising for manipulating optoelectronics,
photonics, and for managing charge- and thermal transport