Atomically thin materials, leveraging their low-dimensional geometries and superior mechanical properties, are amenable to exquisite strain manipulation with a broad tunability inaccessible to bulk or thin-film materials. Such capability offers unexplored possibilities for probing intriguing physics and materials science in the 2D limit as well as enabling unprecedented device applications. Here, the strain-engineered anisotropic optical and electrical properties in solution-grown, sub-millimeter-size 2D Te are systematically investigated through designing and introducing a controlled buckled geometry in its intriguing chiral-chain lattice. The observed Raman spectra reveal anisotropic lattice vibrations under the corresponding straining conditions. The feasibility of using buckled 2D Te for ultrastretchable strain sensors with a high gauge factor (≈380) is further explored. 2D Te is an emerging material boasting attractive characteristics for electronics, sensors, quantum devices, and optoelectronics. The results suggest the potential of 2D Te as a promising candidate for designing and implementing flexible and stretchable devices with strain-engineered functionalities.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202002342DOI Listing

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