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Edge-controlled Growth and Etching of Two-Dimensional GaSe Monolayers...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Publication Date
Page Numbers
482 to 491
Volume
139
Issue
1

Understanding the atomistic mechanisms governing the growth of two-dimensional (2D) materials is of great importance in guiding the synthesis of wafer-sized, single-crystalline, high-quality 2D crystals and heterostructures. Etching, in many cases regarded as the reverse process of material growth, has been used to study the growth kinetics of graphene. In this work, we explore a growth-etching-regrowth process of monolayer GaSe crystals, including single-crystalline triangles and irregularly-shaped domains formed by merged triangles. We show that the etching begins at a slow rate, creating triangular, truncated triangular, or hexagonally-shaped holes that eventually evolve to exclusively triangles that are rotated 60° with respect to the crystalline orientation of the monolayer triangular crystals. The regrowth occurs much faster than etching, reversibly filling the etched holes and then enlarging the size of the monolayer crystals. Theoretical model developed based on kinetic Wulff construction (KWC) theory and density functional theory (DFT) calculations accurately describe the observed morphology evolution of the monolayer GaSe crystals and etched holes during the growth and etching processes, showing that they are governed by the probability of atom attachment/detachment to/from different types of edges with different formation energies of nucleus/dents mediated by chemical potential difference Δμ between Ga and Se. Our growth-etching-regrowth study not only provides guidance to understand the growth mechanisms of 2D binary crystals, but a potential method for the synthesis of large, shape-controllable, high quality single-crystalline 2D crystals and their lateral heterostructures.