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Home»News»New synthesis method enhances MoS₂ optoelectronic performance
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New synthesis method enhances MoS₂ optoelectronic performance

July 22, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
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New synthesis method enhances MoS₂ optoelectronic performance
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Typical SEM images of the PLD-MoS2 films deposited onto Si-substrates at different Td values and an NLP7000. Credit: Advanced Optical Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1002/adom.202302966

An international research team led by Professor My Ali El Khakani of the Institut national de la recherche scientifique (INRS) has made a surprising discovery about the properties of molybdenum disulfide, also known as MoS2. The material is highly sought after in optoelectronics.

The results of this study, carried out in collaboration with Professor Mustapha Jouiad’s team at the Université de Picardie Jules Verne (UPJV), have just been published in the journal Advanced Optical Materials, and are featured on the inside cover of May issue.

This work has been accomplished within the framework of Driss Mouloua’s thesis research, carried out under the joint supervision of Professors El Khakani and Jouiad at INRS’s Énergie Matériaux Télécommunications Research Centre and UPJV. Dr. Mouloua is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Commissariat à l’énergie atomique in France.

“By proposing a new way of growing MoS2 films with a vertically layered structure, we are paving the way for the synthesis of MoS2 that is labeled as ‘3D,’ but has exceptional ‘2D’ behavior. The results of this thesis work could lead to innovative developments in the fields of optoelectronics and renewable energies,” said Mouloua, Ph.D., energy and material sciences.

A material with unique properties

Following the worldwide excitement generated by graphene and its applications, MoS2 is emerging as another two-dimensional (2D) material, yet semiconductor, that is attracting a great deal of interest from the scientific community because of its exceptional properties. While it has been used since the 1970s and 1980s as a solid lubricant in the aerospace industry and for high-performance mechanics, MoS2 is making a comeback as a strategic material for optoelectronics.

See also  Researchers achieve low-energy synthesis of bulk van der Waals materials

MoS2 is a material that can strongly absorb light and transform it into electrical charges with high electron mobility, giving it the capacity for rapid signal transmission. This combination of unique properties makes it particularly appealing for the development of optoelectronic applications such as photodetectors, photonic switches, next-generation solar cells, and light-emitting diodes (LEDs).

However, all these properties depend on the way the monolayers (or atomic “monosheets”) of this 2D material, which can be pictured as “puff pastry” structure, are arranged in the films. Over time, scientists have developed manufacturing strategies to obtain 2 to 5 horizontally layered monolayers, in order to take advantage of MoS2‘s exceptional optoelectronic properties.

A new paradigm

With their most recent study, Professor El Khakani’s team has changed the paradigm by demonstrating that it is possible to synthesize relatively thick MoS2 films (“3D”) that are made up of vertically aligned MoS2 layers. To achieve this, the team used an innovative approach based on pulsed-laser deposition (PLD) technique.

By controlling the growth conditions of these thin PLD-MoS2 films and studying their properties, the researchers have achieved relatively thick MoS2 films (about 100 nanometers thick, equivalent to ~200 atomic monolayers of MoS2) but their optoelectronic behavior astonishingly resembles that of ultra-thin 2D MoS2 (with only 3–5 MoS2 monolayers).

“In the end, we have a ‘3D’ material that behaves like a 2D material, which is quite interesting yet intriguing,” said Professor El Khakani.

By pushing deeper their nanostructural characterizations, by using high-resolution electron transmission microscopy, the researchers have discovered that the more vertical the layers, the better the photodetection performance of the PLD-MoS2 films.

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This novel nanostructure enables the vertical MoS2 monolayers to interact individually with light, enhancing their capacity to absorb light and to achieve a swift vertical transfer (along the MoS2 layers) of the created photocharges.

This, in turn, translates into an optoelectronic performance comparable to that of the few-layers “2D” MoS2 ultrathin films. Moreover, these “3D” PLD-MoS2 films can be scaled-up to the wafer level while circumventing the difficulties associated with the challenging synthesis of only few horizontal monolayers.

With this achievement, Professor El Kakhani’s team is opening a new route towards a better control of the optoelectronic properties of MoS2 films by gaining control on the vertical alignment of their constituting MoS2 monolayers.

“Not only is this the first time that MoS2 with vertically aligned layers has been achieved by using the PLD technique, but, even more importantly, we have succeeded in correlating directly the degree of vertical alignment of the monolayers with the photodetection performance of the MoS2 films.

“This is an important breakthrough that will contribute to a better understanding of quantum confinement phenomena in ‘3D’-MoS2, and to improving the design of new optoelectronic devices based on ‘2D’ materials, such as MoS2, or WS2” concludes the researcher.


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