Twisted epitaxy of gold nanodisks grown between twisted substrate layers of molybdenum disulfide.
Yi CuiJingyang WangYanbin LiYecun WuEmily BeenZe-Wen ZhangJiawei ZhouWenbo ZhangHarold Y HwangRobert SinclairYi CuiPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
We expand the concept of epitaxy to a regime of "twisted epitaxy" with the epilayer crystal orientation between two substrates influenced by their relative orientation. We annealed nanometer-thick gold (Au) nanoparticles between two substrates of exfoliated hexagonal molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) with varying orientation of their basal planes with a mutual twist angle ranging from 0° to 60°. Transmission electron microscopy studies show that Au aligns midway between the top and bottom MoS 2 when the twist angle of the bilayer is small (<~7°). For larger twist angles, Au has only a small misorientation with the bottom MoS 2 that varies approximately sinusoidally with twist angle of the bilayer MoS 2 . Four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy analysis further reveals a periodic strain variation (<|±0.5%|) in the Au nanodisks associated with the twisted epitaxy, consistent with the Moiré registry of the two MoS 2 twisted layers.
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