Highly Scalable, Atomically Thin WSe<sub>2</sub> Grown <i>via</i> Metal–Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition

Sarah M. Eichfeld, Lorraine Hossain(Pennsylvania State University), Yu‐Chuan Lin(Pennsylvania State University), Aleksander F. Piasecki(Pennsylvania State University), Benjamin Kupp(Pennsylvania State University), A. Glen Birdwell(DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory), Robert A. Burke(DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory), Ning Lü(The University of Texas at Dallas), Xin Peng(The University of Texas at Dallas), Jie Li(Pennsylvania State University), Angelica Azcatl(The University of Texas at Dallas), Stephen McDonnell(The University of Texas at Dallas), Robert M. Wallace(The University of Texas at Dallas), Moon J. Kim(The University of Texas at Dallas), Theresa S. Mayer(Pennsylvania State University), Joan M. Redwing, Joshua A. Robinson
ACS Nano
January 27, 2015
Cited by 408

Abstract

Tungsten diselenide (WSe2) is a two-dimensional material that is of interest for next-generation electronic and optoelectronic devices due to its direct bandgap of 1.65 eV in the monolayer form and excellent transport properties. However, technologies based on this 2D material cannot be realized without a scalable synthesis process. Here, we demonstrate the first scalable synthesis of large-area, mono and few-layer WSe2 via metal-organic chemical vapor deposition using tungsten hexacarbonyl (W(CO)6) and dimethylselenium ((CH3)2Se). In addition to being intrinsically scalable, this technique allows for the precise control of the vapor-phase chemistry, which is unobtainable using more traditional oxide vaporization routes. We show that temperature, pressure, Se:W ratio, and substrate choice have a strong impact on the ensuing atomic layer structure, with optimized conditions yielding >8 μm size domains. Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) confirm crystalline monoto-multilayer WSe2 is achievable. Finally, TEM and vertical current/voltage transport provide evidence that a pristine van der Waals gap exists in WSe2/graphene heterostructures.


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