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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 4449, 2024 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38789446

RESUMO

Van der Waals heterostructures have opened new opportunities to develop atomically thin (opto)electronic devices with a wide range of functionalities. The recent focus on manipulating the interlayer twist angle has led to the observation of out-of-plane room temperature ferroelectricity in twisted rhombohedral bilayers of transition metal dichalcogenides. Here we explore the switching behaviour of sliding ferroelectricity using scanning probe microscopy domain mapping and tunnelling transport measurements. We observe well-pronounced ambipolar switching behaviour in ferroelectric tunnelling junctions with composite ferroelectric/non-polar insulator barriers and support our experimental results with complementary theoretical modelling. Furthermore, we show that the switching behaviour is strongly influenced by the underlying domain structure, allowing the fabrication of diverse ferroelectric tunnelling junction devices with various functionalities. We show that to observe the polarisation reversal, at least one partial dislocation must be present in the device area. This behaviour is drastically different from that of conventional ferroelectric materials, and its understanding is an important milestone for the future development of optoelectronic devices based on sliding ferroelectricity.

2.
Nano Lett ; 24(6): 1996-2002, 2024 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38295286

RESUMO

Twisted bilayers of two-dimensional semiconductors offer a versatile platform for engineering quantum states for charge carriers using moiré superlattice effects. Among the systems of recent interest are twistronic MoX2/WX2 heterostructures (X = Se or S), which undergo reconstruction into preferential stacking domains and highly strained domain wall networks, determining the electron/hole localization across moiré superlattices. Here, we present a catalogue of options for the formation of self-organized quantum dots and wires in lattice-reconstructed marginally twisted MoX2/WX2 bilayers with a relative lattice mismatch δ ≪ 1 for twist angles ranging from perfect alignment to θ ∼ 1°. On the basis of multiscale modeling taking into account twirling of domain wall networks, we analyze bilayers with both parallel and antiparallel orientations of their unit cells and describe crossovers between different positioning of band edges for electrons and holes across moiré superlattices when θ < δ and θ > δ.

3.
Nano Lett ; 23(19): 8875-8880, 2023 Oct 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37781903

RESUMO

Lattice relaxation in twistronic bilayers with close lattice parameters and almost perfect crystallographic alignment of the layers results in the transformation of the moiré pattern into a sequence of preferential stacking domains and domain wall networks. Here, we show that reconstructed moiré superlattices of the perfectly aligned heterobilayers of same chalcogen transition metal dichalcogenides have broken-symmetry structures featuring twisted nodes ("twirls") of domain wall networks. The analysis of twist-angle dependence of strain characteristics for the broken-symmetry structures shows that the formation of twirl reduces the amount of hydrostatic strain around the nodes, potentially weakening their influence on the band edge energies of electrons and holes.

4.
Adv Mater ; 35(38): e2207816, 2023 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37377064

RESUMO

Semiconducting ferroelectric materials with low energy polarization switching offer a platform for next-generation electronics such as ferroelectric field-effect transistors. Recently discovered interfacial ferroelectricity in bilayers of transition metal dichalcogenide films provides an opportunity to combine the potential of semiconducting ferroelectrics with the design flexibility of 2D material devices. Here, local control of ferroelectric domains in a marginally twisted WS2 bilayer is demonstrated with a scanning tunneling microscope at room temperature, and their observed reversible evolution is understood using a string-like model of the domain wall network (DWN). Two characteristic regimes of DWN evolution are identified: (i) elastic bending of partial screw dislocations separating smaller domains with twin stackings due to mutual sliding of monolayers at domain boundaries and (ii) merging of primary domain walls into perfect screw dislocations, which become the seeds for the recovery of the initial domain structure upon reversing electric field. These results open the possibility to achieve full control over atomically thin semiconducting ferroelectric domains using local electric fields, which is a critical step towards their technological use.

5.
Nano Lett ; 23(10): 4120-4125, 2023 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37158207

RESUMO

Ferroelectricity (Valasek, J. Phys. Rev. 1921, 17, 475), a spontaneous formation of electric polarization, is a solid state phenomenon, usually, associated with ionic compounds or complex materials. Here we show that, atypically for elemental solids, few-layer graphenes can host an equilibrium out-of-plane electric polarization, switchable by sliding the constituent graphene sheets. The systems hosting such effect include mixed-stacking tetralayers and thicker (5-9 layers) rhombohedral graphitic films with a twin boundary in the middle of a flake. The predicted electric polarization would also appear in marginally (small-angle) twisted few-layer flakes, where lattice reconstruction would give rise to networks of mesoscale domains with alternating value and sign of out-of-plane polarization.

6.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 17(4): 390-395, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35210566

RESUMO

Twisted heterostructures of two-dimensional crystals offer almost unlimited scope for the design of new metamaterials. Here we demonstrate a room temperature ferroelectric semiconductor that is assembled using mono- or few-layer MoS2. These van der Waals heterostructures feature broken inversion symmetry, which, together with the asymmetry of atomic arrangement at the interface of two 2D crystals, enables ferroelectric domains with alternating out-of-plane polarization arranged into a twist-controlled network. The last can be moved by applying out-of-plane electrical fields, as visualized in situ using channelling contrast electron microscopy. The observed interfacial charge transfer, movement of domain walls and their bending rigidity agree well with theoretical calculations. Furthermore, we demonstrate proof-of-principle field-effect transistors, where the channel resistance exhibits a pronounced hysteresis governed by pinning of ferroelectric domain walls. Our results show a potential avenue towards room temperature electronic and optoelectronic semiconductor devices with built-in ferroelectric memory functions.

7.
Nano Lett ; 22(4): 1534-1540, 2022 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35129361

RESUMO

Moiré structures in small-angle-twisted bilayers of two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors with a broken-symmetry interface form arrays of ferroelectric (FE) domains with periodically alternating out-of-plane polarization. Here, we propose a network theory for the tunability of such FE domain structure by applying an electric field perpendicular to the 2D crystal. Using multiscale analysis, we derive a fully parametrized string-theory-like description of the domain wall network (DWN) and show that it undergoes a qualitative change, after the arcs of partial dislocation (PD) like domain walls merge (near the network nodes) into streaks of perfect screw dislocations (PSD), which happens at a threshold displacement field dependent on the DWN period.

8.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 13422, 2021 Jun 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34183714

RESUMO

In bilayers of two-dimensional semiconductors with stacking arrangements which lack inversion symmetry charge transfer between the layers due to layer-asymmetric interband hybridisation can generate a potential difference between the layers. We analyse bilayers of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs)-in particular, [Formula: see text]-for which we find a substantial stacking-dependent charge transfer, and InSe, for which the charge transfer is found to be negligibly small. The information obtained about TMDs is then used to map potentials generated by the interlayer charge transfer across the moiré superlattice in twistronic bilayers.

9.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 15(7): 592-597, 2020 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32451502

RESUMO

Van der Waals heterostructures form a unique class of layered artificial solids in which physical properties can be manipulated through controlled composition, order and relative rotation of adjacent atomic planes. Here we use atomic-resolution transmission electron microscopy to reveal the lattice reconstruction in twisted bilayers of the transition metal dichalcogenides, MoS2 and WS2. For twisted 3R bilayers, a tessellated pattern of mirror-reflected triangular 3R domains emerges, separated by a network of partial dislocations for twist angles θ < 2°. The electronic properties of these 3R domains, featuring layer-polarized conduction-band states caused by lack of both inversion and mirror symmetry, appear to be qualitatively different from those of 2H transition metal dichalcogenides. For twisted 2H bilayers, stable 2H domains dominate, with nuclei of a second metastable phase. This appears as a kagome-like pattern at θ ≈ 2°, transitioning at θ → 0 to a hexagonal array of screw dislocations separating large-area 2H domains. Tunnelling measurements show that such reconstruction creates strong piezoelectric textures, opening a new avenue for engineering of 2D material properties.

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