Exfoliation of Quasi-Stratified Bi2S3 Crystals into Micron-Scale Ultrathin Corrugated Nanosheets
Author(s) -
Rhian M. Clark,
Jimmy C. Kotsakidis,
Bent Weber,
Kyle J. Berean,
Benjamin J. Carey,
Matthew R. Field,
Hareem Khan,
Jian Zhen Ou,
Taimur Ahmed,
Christopher J. Harrison,
Ivan Cole,
Kay Latham,
Kourosh Kalantarzadeh,
Torben Daeneke
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.6b03478
Subject(s) - exfoliation joint , van der waals force , materials science , chalcogenide , bismuth , orthorhombic crystal system , nanotechnology , stoichiometry , crystal (programming language) , planar , doping , crystal structure , chemical physics , crystallography , optoelectronics , graphene , molecule , chemistry , computer graphics (images) , organic chemistry , computer science , programming language , metallurgy
There is ongoing interest in exploring new two-dimensional materials and exploiting their functionalities. Here, a top-down approach is used for developing a new morphology of ultrathin nanosheets from highly ordered bismuth sulfide crystals. The efficient chemical delamination method exfoliates the bulk powder into a suspension of corrugated ultrathin sheets, despite the fact that the Bi2S3 fundamental layers are made of atomically thin ribbons that are held together by van der Waals forces in two dimensions. Morphological analyses show that the produced corrugated sheets are as thin as 2.5 nm and can be as large as 20 μm across. Determined atomic ratios indicate that the exfoliation process introduces sulfur vacancies into the sheets, with a resulting stoichiometry of Bi2S2.6. It is hypothesized that the nanoribbons were cross-linked during the reduction process leading to corrugated sheet formation. The material is used for preparing field effect devices and was found to be highly p-doped, which is att...
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