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3d transition metal coordination on monolayer MoS 2 : a facile doping method to functionalize surfaces.

He LiuWalner Costa SilvaLeonardo Santana Gonçalves de SouzaAmanda Garcez VeigaLeandro Seixas RochaKazunori FujisawaEthan KahnTianyi ZhangFu ZhangZhuohang YuKatherine ThompsonYu LeiChristiano J S de MatosMaria Luiza M RoccoMauricio TerronesDaniel Grasseschi
Published in: Nanoscale (2022)
Two-dimensional materials (2DM) have attracted much interest due to their distinct optical, electronic, and catalytic properties. These properties can be tuned by a range of methods including substitutional doping and, as recently demonstrated, by surface functionalization with single atoms, thus increasing the 2DM portfolio. We theoretically and experimentally describe the coordination reaction between MoS 2 monolayers and 3d transition metals (TMs), exploring their nature and MoS 2 -TM interactions. Density functional theory calculations, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy point to the formation of MoS 2 -TM coordination complexes, where the adsorption energy for 3d TMs resembles the crystal-field (CF) stabilization energy for weak-field complexes. Pearson's theory for hard-soft acid-base and ligand-field theory were used to discuss the periodic trends of 3d TM coordination on MoS 2 monolayer surfaces. We found that softer acids with higher ligand field stabilization energy, such as Ni 2+ , tend to form bonds with more covalent character with MoS 2 , which can be considered a soft base. On the other hand, harder acids, such as Cr 3+ , tend to form more ionic bonds. Additionally, we studied the trends in charge transfer and doping observed from XPS and PL results, where metals like Ni led to n-type doping. In contrast, Cu functionalization results in p-type doping. Therefore, the formation of coordination complexes on TMD's surface is a potentially effective way to control and understand the nature of single-atom functionalization of TMD monolayers without relying on or creating new defects.
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