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Step-Climbing Epitaxy of Layered Materials with Giant Out-of-Plane Lattice Mismatch.

Xuehan ZhouYan LiangHuixia FuRuixue ZhuJingyue WangXuzhong CongCongwei TanCongcong ZhangYichi ZhangYani WangQijia XuPeng GaoHai-Lin Peng
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Heteroepitaxy with large lattice mismatch remains a great challenge for high-quality epifilm growth. Although great efforts have been devoted to epifilm growth with an in-plane lattice mismatch, the epitaxy of 2D layered crystals on stepped substrates with a giant out-of-plane lattice mismatch is seldom reported. Here, taking the molecular-beam epitaxy of 2D semiconducting Bi 2 O 2 Se on 3D SrTiO 3 substrates as an example, a step-climbing epitaxy growth strategy is proposed, in which the n-th (n = 1, 2, 3…) epilayer climbs the step with height difference from out-of-plane lattice mismatch and continues to grow the n+1-th epilayer. Step-climbing epitaxy can spontaneously relax and release the strain from the out-of-plane lattice mismatch, which ensures the high quality of large-area epitaxial films. Wafer-scale uniform 2D Bi 2 O 2 Se single-crystal films with controllable thickness can be obtained via step-climbing epitaxy. Most notably, one-unit-cell Bi 2 O 2 Se films (1.2 nm thick) exhibit a high Hall mobility of 180 cm 2 V -1 s -1 at room temperature, which exceeds that of silicon and other 2D semiconductors with comparable thickness. As an out-of-plane lattice mismatch is generally present in the epitaxy of layered materials, the step-climbing epitaxy strategy expands the existing epitaxial growth theory and provides guidance toward the high-quality synthesis of layered materials.
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