Van der Waals MoS2/graphene heterostructures
are promising
candidates for advanced electronics and optoelectronics beyond graphene.
Herein, scanning probe methods and Raman spectroscopy were applied
for analysis of the electronic and structural properties of monolayer
(ML) and bilayer 2H-MoS2 deposited on single-layer graphene
(SLG)-coated sapphire (S) substrates by means of an industrially scalable
metal organic chemical vapor deposition process. The SLG/S substrate
shows two regions with distinctly different morphology and varied
interfacial coupling between SLG and S. ML MoS2 nanosheets
grown on the almost free-standing graphene show no detectable interface
coupling to the substrate, and a value of 2.23 eV for the MoS2 quasiparticle bandgap is determined. However, if the graphene
is involved in hydrogen bonds to the hydroxylated sapphire surface,
an increased MoS2/graphene interlayer coupling results,
marked by a shift of the conduction band edge toward Fermi energy
and a reduction of the ML MoS2 quasiparticle bandgap to
1.98 eV. The surface topography reveals a buckle structure of ML MoS2 in conformity with SLG that is used to determine the dependence
of the ML MoS2 bandgap on the interfacial spacing of this
heterostructure. In addition, an in-gap acceptor state about 0.9 eV
above the valence band minimum of MoS2 has been observed
on locally elevated positions on both SLG/S regions, which is attributed
to local bending strain in the grown MoS2 nanosheets. These
fundamental insights reveal the impact of the underlying substrate
on the topography and the band alignment of the ML MoS2/SLG heterostructure and provide the possibility for engineering
the quasiparticle bandgap of ML MoS2/SLG grown on controlled
substrates that may impact the performance of electronic and optoelectronic
devices therewith.