Nanotechnology Now – Press Release: Controlled synthesis of crystal flakes paves path for advanced future electronics


Home > Press > Controlled synthesis of crystal flakes paves path for advanced future electronics

Researchers obtained high-quality 2D InAs single crystals via van der Waals epitaxy and explored the optical and electrical properties of InAs single crystals.
CREDIT
Nano Research, Tsinghua University Press
Researchers obtained high-quality 2D InAs single crystals via van der Waals epitaxy and explored the optical and electrical properties of InAs single crystals.
CREDIT
Nano Research, Tsinghua University Press

Abstract:
The third dimension may be responsible for preventing electronics from becoming thinner, tinier and more flexible, according to an international collaboration that developed a way to manufacture new, idealized two-dimensional semiconductor materials.

Controlled synthesis of crystal flakes paves path for advanced future electronics


Tsinghua, China | Posted on June 17th, 2022

The researchers, led by Lin Zhou, associate professor of chemistry at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China, focused on indium arsenide (InAs), a narrow bandgap semiconductor with properties useful for high-speed electronics and highly sensitive infrared photodetectors. Unlike most of the existing 2D materials with layered strucutures, the problem, Zhou said, is that InAs typically has a 3D lattice structure, which makes it challenging to transform into ultrathin 2D films for advanced electronic and optoelectronic applications.

“The growth of large, ultrathin 2D non-layered materials has been a grand challenge, but one worth solving.Thanks to its high mobility and tunable bandgap, 2D InAs could be a critical material for next-generation, high-performance nano-electronics, nano-photonics and quantum devices,” Zhou said. “It has the advantages of both InAs, such as high carrier mobility, small and direct bandgap size, and 2D materials, which have an ultrathin nature suitable for small size devices, are flexible and transparent.” This work also provides a promising way to further expand the group of 2D semiconductors by incorporating materials with non-layered structures.

The researchers took advantage of a weak atomic attraction known as the van der Waals force in epitaxy growth. The force describes how neutral molecules can connect with one another, while epitaxy involves applying an overlay of one material to a crystal-like substrate. Using atomically flat mica, which is naturally layered, as a substrate, the researchers grew a thin layer of InAs. The molecules in the mica substrate and the molecules in the InAs are mutually attracted enough to connect, preventing the InAs from growing into a 3D lattice. Moreover, the van der Waals growth ensures strain-free and no misfit dislocations in as-grown 2D InAs. The InAs can be incredibly thin with desired properties.

Zhou also noted that the InAs and the substrate do not covalently bond, so they can be separated and the substrate re-used, making the synthesis process more cost-effective.

“We also found that we can tune the properties of 2D InAs by changing the material’s thickness due to the quantum confinement effect,” Zhou said. “The 2D InAs is easy to tailor to achieve desired properties and to integrate with other compounds. In addition to manipulating the thickness during synthesis, we can also stack 2D InAs with other 2D materials to form heterojunctions for multifunction performance, giving them significant advantages in electronics and photovoltaics.”

The final 2D InAs material takes the form of triangular flakes, roughly five nanometers thick. That’s about 0.0007 the size of a single red blood cell. The tinier the material, the smaller the devices it will eventually comprise, Zhou said.

“Prior to this work, high-quality 2D — meaning less than 10 nanometers thick — InAs had not been reported, let alone a scalable synthesis of 2D InAs single crystals with unique optical and electronic properties,” Zhou said. “Our work paves the way for miniaturization InAs-based devices and integrations.”

Next, Zhou said the team will explore new 2D semiconductor to grow with an ultimate goal of achieving scalable synthesis of high-quality 2D materials over large areas for multi-functional applications.

Other authors include Jiuxiang Dai, Zhitong Jin, Yunlei Zhou, Xianyu Hu and Tao Li, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China; Teng Yang, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Jingyi Zou and Xu Zhang, Carnegie Mellon University, United States; Weigao Xu, Nanjing University, China; and Yuxuan Lin, University of California, United States.

The National Key Basic Research Program of China, the start-up funds of Shanghai Jiao Tong University, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the National Key R&D Program of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China and Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences supported this research.

####

About Tsinghua University Press
Nano Research is a peer-reviewed, international and interdisciplinary research journal, sponsored by Tsinghua University and the Chinese Chemical Society. It offers readers an attractive mix of authoritative and comprehensive reviews and original cutting-edge research papers. After more than 10 years of development, it has become one of the most influential academic journals in the nano field. Rapid review to ensure quick publication is a key feature of Nano Research. In 2020 InCites Journal Citation Reports, Nano Research has an Impact Factor of 8.897 (8.696, 5 years), the total cites reached 23150, and the number of highly cited papers reached 129, ranked among the top 2.5% of over 9000 academic journals, ranking first in China’s international academic journals.

About SciOpen

SciOpen is a professional open access resource for discovery of scientific and technical content published by the Tsinghua University Press and its publishing partners, providing the scholarly publishing community with innovative technology and market-leading capabilities. SciOpen provides end-to-end services across manuscript submission, peer review, content hosting, analytics, and identity management and expert advice to ensure each journal’s development by offering a range of options across all functions as Journal Layout, Production Services, Editorial Services, Marketing and Promotions, Online Functionality, etc. By digitalizing the publishing process, SciOpen widens the reach, deepens the impact, and accelerates the exchange of ideas.

For more information, please click here

Contacts:
Yao Meng
Tsinghua University Press

Office: 86-108-347-0574

Copyright © Tsinghua University Press

If you have a comment, please Contact us.

Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.

Bookmark:
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Reddit
Magnoliacom
Furl
Facebook

They published their approach on June 3 in Nano Research. (DOI 10.1007/s12274-022-4543-8)

News and information


Solving the puzzle of 2D disorder: An interdisciplinary team developed a new method to characterize disorder in 2D materials June 17th, 2022


Undergrads begin summer quantum research with support from Moore Foundation, Chicago region universities, national labs: Inaugural cohort of students join quantum research labs around the Midwest, planting the seeds for a diverse and inclusive quantum workforce June 17th, 2022


Photonic integrated erbium doped amplifiers reach commercial performance: Boosting light power revolutionizes communications and autopilots June 17th, 2022

2 Dimensional Materials


Solving the puzzle of 2D disorder: An interdisciplinary team developed a new method to characterize disorder in 2D materials June 17th, 2022


UBCO researchers change the game when it comes to activity tracking: Flexible, highly sensitive motion device created by extrusion printing June 17th, 2022

Possible Futures


Scientists offer solutions for risky tap water June 17th, 2022


Solving the puzzle of 2D disorder: An interdisciplinary team developed a new method to characterize disorder in 2D materials June 17th, 2022


Photonic integrated erbium doped amplifiers reach commercial performance: Boosting light power revolutionizes communications and autopilots June 17th, 2022


OCSiAl expands its graphene nanotube production capacities to Europe June 17th, 2022

Chip Technology


Solving the puzzle of 2D disorder: An interdisciplinary team developed a new method to characterize disorder in 2D materials June 17th, 2022


CEA & Partners Present ‘Powerful Step Towards Industrialization’ Of Linear Si Quantum Dot Arrays Using FDSOI Material at VLSI Symposium: Invited paper reports 3-step characterization chain and resulting methodologies and metrics that accelerate learning, provide data on device pe June 17th, 2022


Marching to the Cadence of Electronics: Innovation A new paper in Nature validates technology developed by John Bowers and collaborators June 10th, 2022


Bumps could smooth quantum investigations: Rice University models show unique properties of 2D materials stressed by contoured substrates June 10th, 2022

Nanoelectronics


The physics of a singing saw: Insights on centuries-old folk instrument is underpinned by a mathematical principle that may pave the way for high-quality resonators for sensing, electronics and more April 22nd, 2022


Eyebrow-raising: Researchers reveal why nanowires stick to each other February 11th, 2022


Visualizing temperature transport: An unexpected technique for nanoscale characterization November 19th, 2021


Leibniz Prize winner Professor Dr. Oliver G. Schmidt moves to Chemnitz University of Technology: President Professor Dr. Gerd Strohmeier refers to an ‘absolute top transfer’ September 10th, 2021

Discoveries


Disinfectant mechanism of nano-sized electrostatic atomized water particles on SARS-CoV-2: Nano-sized electrostatic atomized water particles destroy SARS-CoV-2 envelope, protein, and RNA, thereby impairing the virus’s ability to bind to host cells June 17th, 2022


New nano-gel to protect children receiving chemotherapy from hearing loss June 17th, 2022


Scientists offer solutions for risky tap water June 17th, 2022


Solving the puzzle of 2D disorder: An interdisciplinary team developed a new method to characterize disorder in 2D materials June 17th, 2022

Announcements


Undergrads begin summer quantum research with support from Moore Foundation, Chicago region universities, national labs: Inaugural cohort of students join quantum research labs around the Midwest, planting the seeds for a diverse and inclusive quantum workforce June 17th, 2022


UBCO researchers change the game when it comes to activity tracking: Flexible, highly sensitive motion device created by extrusion printing June 17th, 2022


Photonic integrated erbium doped amplifiers reach commercial performance: Boosting light power revolutionizes communications and autopilots June 17th, 2022


OCSiAl expands its graphene nanotube production capacities to Europe June 17th, 2022

Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters


Disinfectant mechanism of nano-sized electrostatic atomized water particles on SARS-CoV-2: Nano-sized electrostatic atomized water particles destroy SARS-CoV-2 envelope, protein, and RNA, thereby impairing the virus’s ability to bind to host cells June 17th, 2022


Scientists offer solutions for risky tap water June 17th, 2022


Chung-Ang University researchers use biomolecule-loaded metal-organic frameworks nanopatterns to aid artificial stem cell differentiation: A new platform mimics live cellular environment to guide stem cell differentiation outside the body without needing complex experimental step June 10th, 2022


Organic water splitters get a boost June 10th, 2022

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *