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All-Printed Ultrahigh-Responsivity MoS 2 Nanosheet Photodetectors Enabled by Megasonic Exfoliation.

Lidia KuoVinod K SangwanSonal V RangnekarTing-Ching ChuDavid LamZhehao ZhuLee J RichterRuipeng LiBeata M SzydłowskaJulia R DowningBenjamin J LuijtenLincoln J LauhonMark C Hersam
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Printed 2D materials, derived from solution-processed inks, offer scalable and cost-effective routes to mechanically flexible optoelectronics. With micrometer-scale control and broad processing latitude, aerosol-jet printing (AJP) is of particular interest for all-printed circuits and systems. Here, AJP is utilized to achieve ultrahigh-responsivity photodetectors consisting of well-aligned, percolating networks of semiconducting MoS 2 nanosheets and graphene electrodes on flexible polyimide substrates. Ultrathin (≈1.2 nm thick) and high-aspect-ratio (≈1 μm lateral size) MoS 2 nanosheets are obtained by electrochemical intercalation followed by megasonic atomization during AJP, which not only aerosolizes the inks but also further exfoliates the nanosheets. The incorporation of the high-boiling-point solvent terpineol into the MoS 2 ink is critical for achieving a highly aligned and flat thin-film morphology following AJP as confirmed by grazing-incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering and atomic force microscopy. Following AJP, curing is achieved with photonic annealing, which yields quasi-ohmic contacts and photoactive channels with responsivities exceeding 10 3  A W -1 that outperform previously reported all-printed visible-light photodetectors by over three orders of magnitude. Megasonic exfoliation coupled with properly designed AJP ink formulations enables the superlative optoelectronic properties of ultrathin MoS 2 nanosheets to be preserved and exploited for the scalable additive manufacturing of mechanically flexible optoelectronics.
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