High-K dielectric sulfur-selenium alloys.
Sandhya SusarlaThierry TsafackPeter Samora OwuorAnand B PuthirathJordan A HachtelGanguli BabuAmey ApteBenMaan I JawdatMartin S HilarioAlbert LermaHéctor A CalderonFrancisco C Robles HernandezDavid W TamTong LiAndrew R LupiniJuan-Carlos IdroboJun LouBingqing WeiPengcheng DaiChandra Sekhar TiwaryPulickel M AjayanPublished in: Science advances (2019)
Upcoming advancements in flexible technology require mechanically compliant dielectric materials. Current dielectrics have either high dielectric constant, K (e.g., metal oxides) or good flexibility (e.g., polymers). Here, we achieve a golden mean of these properties and obtain a lightweight, viscoelastic, high-K dielectric material by combining two nonpolar, brittle constituents, namely, sulfur (S) and selenium (Se). This S-Se alloy retains polymer-like mechanical flexibility along with a dielectric strength (40 kV/mm) and a high dielectric constant (K = 74 at 1 MHz) similar to those of established metal oxides. Our theoretical model suggests that the principal reason is the strong dipole moment generated due to the unique structural orientation between S and Se atoms. The S-Se alloys can bridge the chasm between mechanically soft and high-K dielectric materials toward several flexible device applications.