Due to their layered structure, two-dimensional Ruddlesden-Popper perovskites (RPPs), composed of multiple organic/inorganic quantum wells, can in principle be exfoliated down to few and single layers. These molecularly thin layers are expected to present unique properties with respect to the bulk counterpart, due to increased lattice deformations caused by interface strain. Here, we have synthesized centimetre-sized, pure-phase single-crystal RPP perovskites (CH(CH)NH)(CHNH)PbI (n = 1-4) from which single quantum well layers have been exfoliated. We observed a reversible shift in excitonic energies induced by laser annealing on exfoliated layers encapsulated by hexagonal boron nitride. Moreover, a highly efficient photodetector was fabricated using a molecularly thin n = 4 RPP crystal, showing a photogain of 10 and an internal quantum efficiency of ~34%. Our results suggest that, thanks to their dynamic structure, atomically thin perovskites enable an additional degree of control for the bandgap engineering of these materials.
The fabrication of crystalline 2D conjugated polymers with well-defined repeating units and in-built porosity presents a significant challenge to synthetic chemists. Yet they present an appealing target because of their desirable physical and electronic properties. Here we report the preparation of a 2D conjugated aromatic polymer synthesized via C-C coupling reactions between tetrabromopolyaromatic monomers. Pre-arranged monomers in the bulk crystal undergo C-C coupling driven by endogenous solid-state polymerization to produce a crystalline polymer, which can be mechanically exfoliated into micrometre-sized lamellar sheets with a thickness of 1 nm. Isothermal gas-sorption measurements of the bulk material reveal a dominant pore size of ~0.6 nm, which indicates uniform open channels from the eclipsed stacking of the sheets. When employed as an organic anode in an ambient-temperature sodium cell, the material allows a fast charge/discharge of sodium ions, with impressive reversible capacity, rate capability and stability metrics.
Among van der Waals layered ferromagnets, monolayer vanadium diselenide (VSe2) stands out due to its robust ferromagnetism. However, the exfoliation of monolayer VSe2 is challenging, not least because the monolayer flake is extremely unstable in air. Using an electrochemical exfoliation approach with organic cations as the intercalants, monolayer 1T‐VSe2 flakes are successfully obtained from the bulk crystal at high yield. Thiol molecules are further introduced onto the VSe2 surface to passivate the exfoliated flakes, which improves the air stability of the flakes for subsequent characterizations. Room‐temperature ferromagnetism is confirmed on the exfoliated 2D VSe2 flakes using a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID), X‐ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD), and magnetic force microscopy (MFM), where the monolayer flake displays the strongest ferromagnetic properties. Se vacancies, which can be ubiquitous in such materials, also contribute to the ferromagnetism of VSe2, although density functional theory (DFT) calculations show that such effect can be minimized by physisorbed oxygen molecules or covalently bound thiol molecules.
The 2H-to-1T' phase transition in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) has been exploited to phase-engineer TMDs for applications in which the metallicity of the 1T' phase is beneficial. However, phase-engineered 1T'-TMDs are metastable; thus, stabilization of the 1T' phase remains an important challenge to overcome before its properties can be exploited. Herein, we performed a systematic study of the 2H-to-1T' phase evolution by lithiation in ultrahigh vacuum. We discovered that by hydrogenating the intercalated Li to form lithium hydride (LiH), unprecedented long-term (>3 months) air stability of the 1T' phase can be achieved. Most importantly, this passivation method has wide applicability for other alkali metals and TMDs. Density functional theory calculations reveal that LiH is a good electron donor and stabilizes the 1T' phase against 2H conversion, aided by the formation of a greatly enhanced interlayer dipole-dipole interaction. Nonlinear optical studies reveal that air-stable 1T'-TMDs exhibit much stronger optical Kerr nonlinearity and higher optical transparency than the 2H phase, which is promising for nonlinear photonic applications.
Two-dimensional hybrid organic-inorganic Ruddlesden-Popper perovskites (RPPs) have attracted considerable attention due to their rich photonic and optoelectronic properties. The natural multi-quantum-well structure of 2D RPPs has been predicted to exhibit a large third-order nonlinearity. However, nonlinear optical studies on 2D RPPs have previously been conducted only on bulk polycrystalline samples, in which only weak third-harmonic generation (THG) has been observed. Here, we perform parametric nonlinear optical characterization of 2D perovskite nanosheets mechanically exfoliated from four different lead halide RPP single crystals, from which we observe ultrastrong THG with a maximum effective third-order susceptibility (χ) of 1.12 × 10 m V. A maximum conversion efficiency of 0.006% is attained, which is more than 5 orders of magnitude higher than previously reported values for 2D materials. The THG emission is resonantly enhanced at the excitonic band gap energy of the 2D RPP crystals and can be tuned from violet to red by selecting the RPP homologue with the requisite resonance. Due to signal depletion effects and phase-matching conditions, the strongest nonlinear response is achieved for thicknesses less than 100 nm.
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