Molecular
beam epitaxy of two-dimensional (2D) GaTe nanostructures
on GaAs(001) substrates has been reported in this study. A trade-off
between growth temperature and growth time (thickness) is a prerequisite
for governing the crystal morphology of 2D GaTe materials from 2D
epitaxial thin films to pseudo-one-dimensional (1D)/2D nanostructures
(including nanorods, nanotriangles, and nanodendrites). Importantly,
through real-time azimuthal reflection high-energy electron diffraction,
a coexistence of hexagonal-GaTe (h-GaTe) and monoclinic-GaTe (m-GaTe)
phases in the film was explored, corresponding to formation of lateral
h/m-GaTe heterophase homojunctions. In addition, we found that utilizing
a GaN/sapphire platform instead of the GaAs(001) substrate promotes
formation of a single-phase h-GaTe in the thin film, which could be
due to the surface-symmetry matching between the GaN/sapphire platform
and the h-GaTe phase. Together with observing an asymmetric emission
broad band of ∼1.76 eV that comes from the pseudo-1D m-GaTe
phase, we provide convincing evidence that the emission feature located
at 1.46 eV originates from the near-band-edge emission of the 2D h-GaTe
epitaxial thin film. These results are meaningful in providing practical
schemes to control the crystal phases of 2D GaTe materials and realize
either hexagonal–monoclinic heterophase lateral homojunctions
or single-phase h-GaTe epitaxial thin films on a wafer scale for future
functional (opto)electronic devices, especially for near-infrared
photodetectors.
This work reports molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) of two-dimensional (2D) GaSe1-xTex ternary alloys recently attracted numerous interesting physics for prospective electronics and optoelectronics even facing crucial challenges in their epitaxial...
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