Graphitic carbon nitride nanosheets are extracted, produced via simple liquid-phase exfoliation of a layered bulk material, g-C3N4. The resulting nanosheets, having ≈2 nm thickness and N/C atomic ratio of 1.31, show an optical bandgap of 2.65 eV. The carbon nitride nanosheets are demonstrated to exhibit excellent photocatalytic activity for hydrogen evolution under visible light.
Phosphorene, an elemental 2D material, which is the monolayer of black phosphorus, has been mechanically exfoliated recently. In its bulk form, black phosphorus shows high carrier mobility (~10000 cm 2 /V· s) and a ~0.3 eV direct bandgap. Well-behaved p-type field-effect transistors with mobilities of up to 1000 cm 2 /V· s, as well as phototransistors, have been demonstrated on few-layer black phosphorus, showing its promise for electronics and optoelectronics applications due to its high hole mobility and thickness-dependence direct bandgap. However, p-n junctions, the basic building blocks of modern electronic and optoelectronic devices, have not yet been realized based on black phosphorus. In this paper, we demonstrate a gate tunable p-n diode based on a p-type black phosphorus/n-type monolayer MoS2 van der Waals p-n heterojunction. Upon illumination, these ultra-thin p-n diodes show a maximum photodetection responsivity of 418 mA/W at the wavelength of 633 nm, and photovoltaic energy conversion with an external quantum efficiency of 0.3%. These p-n diodes show promise for broadband photodetection and solar energy harvesting.Key words: black phosphorus, phosphorene, MoS2, p-n diode, van der Waals heterojunction, photodetection, solar cell 3 The successful isolation of graphene from graphite has led to its extensive study in physics, materials, and nano-engineering due to its extraordinary electrical and mechanical properties. [1][2][3][4] However, a lack of a bandgap limits its potential for electronic device applications, and has inspired the exploration of other 2D layered materials. [5][6][7] Among them, transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), such as MoS2, are the most studied materials. [8][9][10][11] Recently, phosphorene, the monolayer form of black phosphorus, has been successfully isolated. 12 Analogous to graphite and graphene, black phosphorus is a stack of phosphorene monolayers, bound together by van der Waals interactions. 12,13 Bulk black phosphorus shows a ~0.3 eV direct bandgap and a mobility of up to ~10000 cm 2 /V· s. 14-17 Its bandgap increases as its thickness decreases, and is predicted to have a >1 eV direct bandgap in its monolayer form. 12,13 Well-behaved p-type field-effect transistors with mobilities of up to 1000 cm 2 /V· s, as well as inverters, have been demonstrated on few-layer black phosphorus. 12,13,[18][19][20] Based on its direct bandgap, few-layer black phosphorus phototransistors have been demonstrated with a responsivity of 4.8 mA/W. 19 These results indicate that black phosphorus is a promising candidate for both high performance electronics and optoelectronics applications due to its ultra-thin 2D nature, high hole mobility, and narrower direct bandgap compared to most of TMDCs. P-N junctions are the basic building blocks of modern semiconductor devices, including diodes, bipolar transistors, photodiodes, light-emitting diodes, and solar cells. In the conventional p-n homo-junction, the p-and n-type regions are formed by 4 chemically doping a bulk semiconduct...
MoS2 is a promising and low-cost material for electrochemical hydrogen production due to its high activity and stability during the reaction. However, the efficiency of hydrogen production is limited by the amount of active sites, for example, edges, in MoS2. Here, we demonstrate that oxygen plasma exposure and hydrogen treatment on pristine monolayer MoS2 could introduce more active sites via the formation of defects within the monolayer, leading to a high density of exposed edges and a significant improvement of the hydrogen evolution activity. These as-fabricated defects are characterized at the scale from macroscopic continuum to discrete atoms. Our work represents a facile method to increase the hydrogen production in electrochemical reaction of MoS2 via defect engineering, and helps to understand the catalytic properties of MoS2.
The fast growth of information technology has been sustained by continuous scaling down of the silicon-based metal-oxide field-effect transistor. However, such technology faces two major challenges to further scaling. First, the device electrostatics (the ability of the transistor's gate electrode to control its channel potential) are degraded when the channel length is decreased, using conventional bulk materials such as silicon as the channel. Recently, two-dimensional semiconducting materials have emerged as promising candidates to replace silicon, as they can maintain excellent device electrostatics even at much reduced channel lengths. The second, more severe, challenge is that the supply voltage can no longer be scaled down by the same factor as the transistor dimensions because of the fundamental thermionic limitation of the steepness of turn-on characteristics, or subthreshold swing. To enable scaling to continue without a power penalty, a different transistor mechanism is required to obtain subthermionic subthreshold swing, such as band-to-band tunnelling. Here we demonstrate band-to-band tunnel field-effect transistors (tunnel-FETs), based on a two-dimensional semiconductor, that exhibit steep turn-on; subthreshold swing is a minimum of 3.9 millivolts per decade and an average of 31.1 millivolts per decade for four decades of drain current at room temperature. By using highly doped germanium as the source and atomically thin molybdenum disulfide as the channel, a vertical heterostructure is built with excellent electrostatics, a strain-free heterointerface, a low tunnelling barrier, and a large tunnelling area. Our atomically thin and layered semiconducting-channel tunnel-FET (ATLAS-TFET) is the only planar architecture tunnel-FET to achieve subthermionic subthreshold swing over four decades of drain current, as recommended in ref. 17, and is also the only tunnel-FET (in any architecture) to achieve this at a low power-supply voltage of 0.1 volts. Our device is at present the thinnest-channel subthermionic transistor, and has the potential to open up new avenues for ultra-dense and low-power integrated circuits, as well as for ultra-sensitive biosensors and gas sensors.
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