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Vapor-Phase Indium Intercalation in van der Waals Nanofibers of Atomically Thin W 6 Te 6 Wires.

Ryusuke NatsuiHiroshi ShimizuYusuke NakanishiZheng LiuAkito ShimamuraNguyen Tuan HungYung-Chang LinTakahiko EndoJiang PuIori KikuchiTaishi TakenobuSusumu OkadaKazu SuenagaRiichiro SaitoYasumitsu Miyata
Published in: ACS nano (2023)
One-dimensional (1D) conducting materials are of great interest as potential building blocks for integrated nanocircuits. Ternary 1D transition-metal chalcogenides, consisting of M 6 X 6 wires with intercalated A atoms (M = Mo or W; X = S, Se, or Te; A = alkali or rare metals, etc .), have attracted much attention due to their 1D metallic behavior, superconductivity, and mechanical flexibility. However, the conventional solid-state reaction usually produces micrometer-scale bulk crystals, limiting their potential use as nanoscale conductors. Here we demonstrate a versatile method to fabricate indium (In)-intercalated W 6 Te 6 (In-W 6 Te 6 ) bundles with a nanoscale thickness. We first prepared micrometer-long, crystalline bundles of van der Waals W 6 Te 6 wires using chemical vapor deposition and intercalated In into the crystal via a vapor-phase reaction. Atomic-resolution electron microscopy revealed that In atoms were surrounded by three adjacent W 6 Te 6 wires. First-principles calculations suggested that their wire-by-wire stacking can transform through postgrowth intercalation. Individual In-W 6 Te 6 bundles exhibited metallic behavior, as theoretically predicted. We further identified the vibrational modes by combining polarized Raman spectroscopy and nonresonant Raman calculations.
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