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Ultrafast laser ablation, intrinsic threshold, and nanopatterning of monolayer molybdenum disulfide. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Laser direct writing offers a contamination-free approach to patterning 2D materials like MoS, with a focus on how different substrates affect the ablation process.
  • The study reveals that femtosecond ablation of MoS is mostly adiabatic, indicating minimal heat transfer to the substrates, with variations in ablation threshold linked to a newly identified etalon effect.
  • The research achieves sub-micron resolution at high speeds for laser patterning and shows that engineered substrates improve efficiency, making ultrafast laser ablation a promising technique for 2D material applications.

Article Abstract

Laser direct writing is an attractive method for patterning 2D materials without contamination. Literature shows that the ultrafast ablation threshold of graphene across substrates varies by an order of magnitude. Some attribute it to the thermal coupling to the substrates, but it remains by and large an open question. For the first time the effect of substrates on the femtosecond ablation of 2D materials is studied using MoS as an example. We show unambiguously that femtosecond ablation of MoS is an adiabatic process with negligible heat transfer to the substrates. The observed threshold variation is due to the etalon effect which was not identified before for the laser ablation of 2D materials. Subsequently, an intrinsic ablation threshold is proposed as a true threshold parameter for 2D materials. Additionally, we demonstrate for the first time femtosecond laser patterning of monolayer MoS with sub-micron resolution and mm/s speed. Moreover, engineered substrates are shown to enhance the ablation efficiency, enabling patterning with low-power ultrafast oscillators. Finally, a zero-thickness approximation is introduced to predict the field enhancement with simple analytical expressions. Our work clarifies the role of substrates on ablation and firmly establishes ultrafast laser ablation as a viable route to pattern 2D materials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9050692PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-10820-wDOI Listing

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