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Engineering the Structural and Electronic Phases of MoTe2 through W Substitution.

D RhodesD A ChenetB E JanicekC NybyY LinW JinD EdelbergEhren M MannebachN FinneyA AntonyT SchirosT KlarrA MazzoniM ChinY-C ChiuW ZhengQ R ZhangF ErnstJ I DadapX TongJ MaR LouS WangT QianH DingR M OsgoodD W PaleyA M LindenbergP Y HuangA N PasupathyM DubeyJ HoneLuis Balicas
Published in: Nano letters (2017)
MoTe2 is an exfoliable transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) that crystallizes in three symmetries: the semiconducting trigonal-prismatic 2H- or α-phase, the semimetallic and monoclinic 1T'- or β-phase, and the semimetallic orthorhombic γ-structure. The 2H-phase displays a band gap of ∼1 eV making it appealing for flexible and transparent optoelectronics. The γ-phase is predicted to possess unique topological properties that might lead to topologically protected nondissipative transport channels. Recently, it was argued that it is possible to locally induce phase-transformations in TMDs, through chemical doping, local heating, or electric-field to achieve ohmic contacts or to induce useful functionalities such as electronic phase-change memory elements. The combination of semiconducting and topological elements based upon the same compound might produce a new generation of high performance, low dissipation optoelectronic elements. Here, we show that it is possible to engineer the phases of MoTe2 through W substitution by unveiling the phase-diagram of the Mo1-xWxTe2 solid solution, which displays a semiconducting to semimetallic transition as a function of x. We find that a small critical W concentration xc ∼ 8% stabilizes the γ-phase at room temperature. This suggests that crystals with x close to xc might be particularly susceptible to phase transformations induced by an external perturbation, for example, an electric field. Photoemission spectroscopy, indicates that the γ-phase possesses a Fermi surface akin to that of WTe2.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule