TY - JOUR
T1 - 3D Crystal Construction by Single-Crystal 2D Material Supercell Multiplying
AU - Li, Wenhao
AU - Shen, Jichuang
AU - Ma, Yaqing
AU - Xu, Xiang
AU - Chen, Han
AU - Yu, Lida
AU - Ji, Chen
AU - He, Menglin
AU - Ma, Kezhao
AU - Duo, Yiwei
AU - Wang, Li
AU - Wei, Tongbo
AU - Shi, Liping
AU - Wu, Muhong
AU - Liu, Kaihui
AU - Zhu, Huaze
AU - Kong, Wei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025/1/13
Y1 - 2025/1/13
N2 - 2D stacking presents a promising avenue for creating periodic superstructures that unveil novel physical phenomena. While extensive research has focused on lateral 2D material superstructures formed through composition modulation and twisted moiré structures, the exploration of vertical periodicity in 2D material superstructures remains limited. Although weak van der Waals interfaces enable layer-by-layer vertical stacking, traditional methods struggle to control in-plane crystal orientation over large areas, and the vertical dimension is constrained by unscalable, low-throughput processes, preventing the achievement of global order structures. In this study, a supercell multiplying approach is introduced that enables high-throughput construction of 3D superstructures on a macroscopic scale, utilizing artificially stacked single-crystalline 2D multilayers as foundational repeating units. By employing wafer-scale single-crystalline 2D materials and referencing the crystal orientation of substrates, the method ensures precise alignment of crystal orientation within and across each supercell, thereby achieving controllable periodicity along all three axes. A centimeter-scale 3R-MoS₂ crystal is successfully constructed, comprising over 200 monolayers of single-crystalline MoS₂, through a bottom-up stacking process. Additionally, the approach accommodates the integration of amorphous oxide, enabling the assembly of 3D non-linear optical crystals with quasi-phase matching. This method paves the way for the bottom-up construction of macroscopic artificial 3D crystals with atomic plane precision, enabling tailored optical, electrical, and thermal properties and advancing the development of novel artificial materials and high-performance applications.
AB - 2D stacking presents a promising avenue for creating periodic superstructures that unveil novel physical phenomena. While extensive research has focused on lateral 2D material superstructures formed through composition modulation and twisted moiré structures, the exploration of vertical periodicity in 2D material superstructures remains limited. Although weak van der Waals interfaces enable layer-by-layer vertical stacking, traditional methods struggle to control in-plane crystal orientation over large areas, and the vertical dimension is constrained by unscalable, low-throughput processes, preventing the achievement of global order structures. In this study, a supercell multiplying approach is introduced that enables high-throughput construction of 3D superstructures on a macroscopic scale, utilizing artificially stacked single-crystalline 2D multilayers as foundational repeating units. By employing wafer-scale single-crystalline 2D materials and referencing the crystal orientation of substrates, the method ensures precise alignment of crystal orientation within and across each supercell, thereby achieving controllable periodicity along all three axes. A centimeter-scale 3R-MoS₂ crystal is successfully constructed, comprising over 200 monolayers of single-crystalline MoS₂, through a bottom-up stacking process. Additionally, the approach accommodates the integration of amorphous oxide, enabling the assembly of 3D non-linear optical crystals with quasi-phase matching. This method paves the way for the bottom-up construction of macroscopic artificial 3D crystals with atomic plane precision, enabling tailored optical, electrical, and thermal properties and advancing the development of novel artificial materials and high-performance applications.
KW - 2D/3D integration
KW - 3R-MoS₂ artificial crystal
KW - high throughput 2D stacking
KW - nonlinear optical (NLO) crystals
KW - second harmonic generation (SHG)
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85209810509
U2 - 10.1002/advs.202411656
DO - 10.1002/advs.202411656
M3 - 文章
C2 - 39556668
AN - SCOPUS:85209810509
SN - 2198-3844
VL - 12
JO - Advanced Science
JF - Advanced Science
IS - 2
M1 - 2411656
ER -