Researchers at the U.S. Dept. of Energy (DOE)’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and the Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville have pioneered a new technique for forming a 2-D, single-atom sheet of two different materials with a seamless boundary.
The study, published in Science, could enable the use of new types of 2-D hybrid materials in technological applications and fundamental research.
By rethinking a traditional method of growing materials, the researchers combined two compounds—graphene and boron nitride—into a single layer only one atom thick. Graphene, which consists of carbon atoms arranged in hexagonal, honeycomb-like rings, has attracted waves of attention because of its high strength and electronic properties.
“People call graphene a wonder material that could revolutionize the landscape of nanotechnology and electronics,” ORNL’s An-Ping Li said. “Indeed, graphene has a lot of potential, but it has limits. To make use of graphene in applications or devices, we need to integrate graphene with other materials.”
One method to combine differing materials into heterostructures is epitaxy, in which one material is grown on top of another such that both have the same crystalline structure. To grow the 2-D materials, the ORNL-UT research team directed the growth process horizontally instead of vertically.
The researchers first grew graphene on a copper foil, etched the graphene to create clean edges, and then grew boron nitride through chemical vapor deposition. Instead of conforming to the structure of the copper base layer as in conventional epitaxy, the boron nitride atoms took on the crystallography of the graphene.
“The graphene piece acted as a seed for the epitaxial growth in 2-D space, so that the crystallography of the boron nitride is solely determined by the graphene,” UT’s Gong Gu said.
Not only did the team’s technique combine the two materials, it also produced an atomically sharp boundary, a 1-D interface, between the two materials. The ability to carefully control this interface, or “heterojunction,” is important from an applied and fundamental perspective, says Gu.
“If we want to harness graphene in an application, we have to make use of the interface properties, since as Nobel laureate Herbert Kroemer once said ‘the interface is the device,’” Li said. “By creating this clean, coherent, 1-D interface, our technique provides us with the opportunity to fabricate graphene-based devices for real applications.”
The new technique also allows researchers to experimentally investigate the scientifically intriguing graphene-boron nitride boundary for the first time.
“There is a vast body of theoretical literature predicting wonderful physical properties of this peculiar boundary, in absence of any experimental validation so far,” said Li, who leads an ORNL effort to study atomic-level structure-transport relationships using the laboratory’s unique four-probe scanning tunneling microscopy facility. “Now we have a platform to explore these properties.”
The research team anticipates that its method can be applied to other combinations of 2-D materials, assuming that the different crystalline structures are similar enough to match one another.
Source: Oak Ridge National Laboratory