Co-reporter:Amin Azizi;Matthew R. Gadinski;Qi Li;Mohammed Abu AlSaud;Jianjun Wang;Yi Wang;Bo Wang;Feihua Liu;Long-Qing Chen;Qing Wang
Advanced Materials 2017 Volume 29(Issue 35) pp:
Publication Date(Web):2017/09/01
DOI:10.1002/adma.201701864
Polymer dielectrics are the preferred materials of choice for power electronics and pulsed power applications. However, their relatively low operating temperatures significantly limit their uses in harsh-environment energy storage devices, e.g., automobile and aerospace power systems. Herein, hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) films are prepared from chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and readily transferred onto polyetherimide (PEI) films. Greatly improved performance in terms of discharged energy density and charge–discharge efficiency is achieved in the PEI sandwiched with CVD-grown h-BN films at elevated temperatures when compared to neat PEI films and other high-temperature polymer and nanocomposite dielectrics. Notably, the h-BN-coated PEI films are capable of operating with >90% charge–discharge efficiencies and delivering high energy densities, i.e., 1.2 J cm−3, even at a temperature close to the glass transition temperature of polymer (i.e., 217 °C) where pristine PEI almost fails. Outstanding cyclability and dielectric stability over a straight 55 000 charge–discharge cycles are demonstrated in the h-BN-coated PEI at high temperatures. The work demonstrates a general and scalable pathway to enable the high-temperature capacitive energy applications of a wide range of engineering polymers and also offers an efficient method for the synthesis and transfer of 2D nanomaterials at the scale demanded for applications.
Co-reporter:Amin Azizi, Yuanxi Wang, Zhong Lin, Ke Wang, Ana Laura Elias, Mauricio Terrones, Vincent H. Crespi, and Nasim Alem
Nano Letters 2016 Volume 16(Issue 11) pp:6982-6987
Publication Date(Web):September 27, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b03075
Whether an alloy is random or ordered can have profound effects on its properties. The close chemical similarity of W and Mo in the two-dimensional semiconductors MoS2 and WS2 has led to the expectation that WxMo1–xS2 is a random alloy. Here we report that triangular monolayer flakes of WxMo1–xS2 produced by sulfurization of MoO3/WO3 are not only nonrandom, but also anisotropic: W and Mo form atomically thin chains oriented parallel to the edges of the triangle, especially around x ∼ 0.5, as resolved by aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy. First-principles calculations reveal that the binding energies of striped and random alloys are nearly identical but that phase segregation at the growth edge favors one metal over another depending on the local sulfur availability, independent of the composition deeper inside the monolayer. Thus, atomically thin striping is kinetically driven and controlled by fluctuations that couple the local chemical potentials of metals and chalcogenide. Considering the nearly identical electronic properties but very different atomic masses of Mo and W, the resulting striped alloy is electronically isotropic, but vibrationally anisotropic. Phonon anomalies associated with the stripe ordering are predicted, as is an anisotropic thermal conductivity. More generally, fluctuation-driven striping provides a mechanism to produce in-plane subnanometer superlattices within two-dimensional crystals, with broad implications for controlling the electronic, optical, and structural properties of these systems.Keywords: anisotropic thermal conductivity; atomic and chemical structures; Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenide alloys; stripe ordering; tunable band gap;
Co-reporter:Amin Azizi, Sarah Eichfeld, Gayle Geschwind, Kehao Zhang, Bin Jiang, Debangshu Mukherjee, Lorraine Hossain, Aleksander F. Piasecki, Bernd Kabius, Joshua A. Robinson, and Nasim Alem
ACS Nano 2015 Volume 9(Issue 5) pp:4882
Publication Date(Web):April 17, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.5b01677
Vertical stacking of two-dimensional (2D) crystals has recently attracted substantial interest due to unique properties and potential applications they can introduce. However, little is known about their microstructure because fabrication of the 2D heterostructures on a rigid substrate limits one’s ability to directly study their atomic and chemical structures using electron microscopy. This study demonstrates a unique approach to create atomically thin freestanding van der Waals heterostructures—WSe2/graphene and MoS2/graphene—as ideal model systems to investigate the nucleation and growth mechanisms in heterostructures. In this study, we use transmission electron microscopy (TEM) imaging and diffraction to show epitaxial growth of the freestanding WSe2/graphene heterostructure, while no epitaxy is maintained in the MoS2/graphene heterostructure. Ultra-high-resolution aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) shows growth of monolayer WSe2 and MoS2 triangles on graphene membranes and reveals their edge morphology and crystallinity. Photoluminescence measurements indicate a significant quenching of the photoluminescence response for the transition metal dichalcogenides on freestanding graphene, compared to those on a rigid substrate, such as sapphire and epitaxial graphene. Using a combination of (S)TEM imaging and electron diffraction analysis, this study also reveals the significant role of defects on the heterostructure growth. The direct growth technique applied here enables us to investigate the heterostructure nucleation and growth mechanisms at the atomic level without sample handling and transfer. Importantly, this approach can be utilized to study a wide spectrum of van der Waals heterostructures.Keywords: atomic and chemical structure; freestanding heterostructures; graphene; MoS2; transition metal dichalcogenides; transmission electron microscopy; WSe2;