ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
October 2024
The widespread adoption of halide perovskites for application in thermoelectric devices, DC power generators, and lasers is hindered by their low charge carrier concentration. In particular, increasing their charge carrier concentration is considered the main challenge to serve as a promising room-temperature thermoelectric material. Efforts have been devoted to enhancing the charge carrier concentration by doping and composition engineering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost modern optical display and sensing devices utilize a limited number of spectral units within the visible range, based on human color perception. In contrast, the rapid advancement of machine-based pattern recognition and spectral analysis could facilitate the use of multispectral functional units, yet the challenge of creating complex, high-definition, and reproducible patterns with an increasing number of spectral units limits their widespread application. Here, we report a technique for optical lithography that employs a single-shot exposure to reproduce perovskite films with spatially controlled optical band gaps through light-induced compositional modulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn atomically thin van der Waals materials, grain boundaries-the line defects between adjacent crystal grains with tilted in-plane rotations-are omnipresent. When the tilting angles are arbitrary, the grain boundaries form inhomogeneous sublattices, giving rise to local electronic states that are not controlled. Here we report on epitaxial realizations of deterministic MoS mirror twin boundaries (MTBs) at which two adjoining crystals are reflection mirroring by an exactly 60° rotation by position-controlled epitaxy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reveal the critical effect of ultrashort dephasing on the polarization of high harmonic generation in Dirac fermions. As the elliptically polarized laser pulse falls in or slightly beyond the multiphoton regime, the elliptically polarized high harmonic generation is produced and exhibits a characteristic polarimetry of the polarization ellipse, which is found to depend on the decoherence time . could then be determined to be a few femtoseconds directly from the experimentally observed polarimetry of high harmonics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a method to precisely control the atomic defects at grain boundaries (GBs) of monolayer MoS by vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) growth using sodium molybdate liquid alloys, which serve as growth catalysts to guide the formations of the thermodynamically most stable GB structure. The Mo-rich chemical environment of the alloys results in Mo-polar 5|7 defects with a yield exceeding 95%. The photoluminescence (PL) intensity of VLS-grown polycrystalline MoS films markedly exceeds that of the films, exhibiting abundant S 5|7 defects, which are kinetically driven by vapor-solid-solid growths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSemiconducting ink based on 2D single-crystal flakes with dangling-bond-free surfaces enables the implementation of high-performance devices on form-free substrates by cost-effective and scalable printing processes. However, the lack of solution-processed p-type 2D semiconducting inks with high mobility is an obstacle to the development of complementary integrated circuits. Here, a versatile strategy of doping with Br is reported to enhance the hole mobility by orders of magnitude for p-type transistors with 2D layered materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnder strong laser fields, electrons in solids radiate high-harmonic fields by travelling through quantum pathways in Bloch bands in the sub-laser-cycle timescales. Understanding these pathways in the momentum space through the high-harmonic radiation can enable an all-optical ultrafast probe to observe coherent lightwave-driven processes and measure electronic structures as recently demonstrated for semiconductors. However, such demonstration has been largely limited for semimetals because the absence of the bandgap hinders an experimental characterization of the exact pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVan der Waals (vdW) heterostructures have drawn much interest over the last decade owing to their absence of dangling bonds and their intriguing low-dimensional properties. The emergence of 2D materials has enabled the achievement of significant progress in both the discovery of physical phenomena and the realization of superior devices. In this work, the group IV metal chalcogenide 2D-layered Ge Se is introduced as a new selection of insulating vdW material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEngineering the boundary structures in 2D materials provides an unprecedented opportunity to program the physical properties of the materials with extensive tunability and realize innovative devices with advanced functionalities. However, structural engineering technology is still in its infancy, and creating artificial boundary structures with high reproducibility remains difficult. In this review, various emergent properties of 2D materials with different grain boundaries, and the current techniques to control the structures, are introduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrystalline films offer various physical properties based on the modulation of their thicknesses and atomic structures. The layer-by-layer assembly of atomically thin crystals provides a powerful means to arbitrarily design films at the atomic level, which are unattainable with existing growth technologies. However, atomically clean assembly of the materials with high scalability and reproducibility remains challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
June 2021
Quasi-one-dimensional (1D) graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) have finite band gaps and active edge states and therefore can be useful for advanced chemical and electronic devices. Here, we present the formation of GNR grids via seed-assisted chemical vapor deposition on Ge(100) substrates. Nucleation seeds, provided by unzipped C, initiated growth of the GNRs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal (M) contact with a semiconductor (S) introduces metal-induced gap states (MIGS), which makes it difficult to study the intrinsic electrical properties of S. A bilayer of metal with graphene (Gr), ., a M/Gr bilayer, may form a contact with S to minimize MIGS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFexsolution of metal nanoparticles (NPs) is emerging as an alternative technique to deliver thermally stable and evenly dispersed metal NPs, which exhibit excellent adhesion with conducting perovskite oxide supports. Here we provide the first demonstration that Ni metal NPs with high areal density (∼175 μm) and fine size (∼38.65 nm) are exsolved from an A-site-deficient perovskite stannate support (LaBaSnNiO (LBSNO)).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnti-CD25 antibodies were immobilized on polypropylene (PP) nonwoven fabrics to specifically remove mouse regulatory T cells (Tregs) from mouse spleen cells. PP fibers were coated with peptide nanosheets, which were prepared by self-assembling of a mixture of X-poly(sarcosine)--(l-Leu-Aib) (X: glycolic acid or a phenylboronic acid) and Y-poly(sarcosine)--(d-Leu-Aib) (Y: glycolic acid or diazirine derivative). Anti-CD25 antibodies were immobilized by covalent linking between the sugar moiety of the antibody and the phenylboronic acid group on the peptide nanosheet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a method that uses van der Waals interactions to transfer continuous, high-quality graphene films from Ge(110) to a different substrate held by hexagonal boron nitride carriers in a clean, dry environment. The transferred films are uniform and continuous with low defect density and few charge puddles. The transfer is effective because of the weak interfacial adhesion energy between graphene and Ge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwisted bilayer graphene (tBLG) is a metallic material with two degenerate van Hove singularity transitions that can rehybridize to form interlayer exciton states. Here we report photoluminescence (PL) emission from tBLG after resonant 2-photon excitation, which tunes with the interlayer stacking angle, θ. We spatially image individual tBLG domains at room-temperature and show a five-fold resonant PL-enhancement over the background hot-electron emission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPoly(sarcosine) displayed on polymeric micelle is reported to trigger a T cell-independent type2 reaction with B1a cells in the mice to produce IgM and IgG3 antibodies. In addition to polymeric micelle, three kinds of vesicles displaying poly(sarcosine) on surface were prepared here to evaluate the amounts and avidities of IgM and IgG3, which were produced in mice, to correlate them with physical properties of the molecular assemblies. The largest amount of IgM was produced after twice administrations of a polymeric micelle of 35 nm diameter (G1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmphiphilic block polypeptides of poly(sarcosine)-b-(l-Val-Aib) and poly(sarcosine)-b-(l-Leu-Aib) and their stereoisomers were self-assembled in water. Three kinds of binary systems of poly(sarcosine)-b-(l-Leu-Aib) with poly(sarcosine)-b-poly(d-Leu-Aib), poly(sarcosine)-b-poly(l-Val-Aib), or poly(sarcosine)-b-(d-Val-Aib) generated vesicles of ca. 200 nm diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree amphiphilic block polypeptides, (sarcosine) -b-(l- or d-Leu-Aib) (L16, D16, D14), having different helical chain lengths or helicity are synthesized. A mixture of L16, D16, and D14 generates vesicles of diameters more than ca. 130 nm by injecting the ethanol solution into water and heating at 90°C for 1 h.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith the decrease of the dimensions of electronic devices, the role played by electrical contacts is ever increasing, eventually coming to dominate the overall device volume and total resistance. This is especially problematic for monolayers of semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), which are promising candidates for atomically thin electronics. Ideal electrical contacts to them would require the use of similarly thin electrode materials while maintaining low contact resistances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChiral materials possess left- and right-handed counterparts linked by mirror symmetry. These materials are useful for advanced applications in polarization optics, stereochemistry and spintronics. In particular, the realization of spatially uniform chiral films with atomic-scale control of their handedness could provide a powerful means for developing nanodevices with novel chiral properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe large-scale growth of semiconducting thin films forms the basis of modern electronics and optoelectronics. A decrease in film thickness to the ultimate limit of the atomic, sub-nanometre length scale, a difficult limit for traditional semiconductors (such as Si and GaAs), would bring wide benefits for applications in ultrathin and flexible electronics, photovoltaics and display technology. For this, transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), which can form stable three-atom-thick monolayers, provide ideal semiconducting materials with high electrical carrier mobility, and their large-scale growth on insulating substrates would enable the batch fabrication of atomically thin high-performance transistors and photodetectors on a technologically relevant scale without film transfer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA polymeric micelle (Lactosome) composed of amphiphilic polydepsipeptide, poly(sarcosine)-block-poly(L-lactic acid), was reported as a T cell-independent antigen. We show here that Lactosome-responsive B cells are predominantly found in the peritoneal cavity (PerC). After immunization of mice with Lactosome, antibody-secreting cells (ASCs) are found only in spleen and bone marrow (BM), but not in PerC.
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