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Anisotropic Properties of Quasi‐1D In<sub>4</sub>Se<sub>3</sub>: Mechanical Exfoliation, Electronic Transport, and Polarization‐Dependent Photoresponse

Nataliia S. Vorobeva, Alexey Lipatov, Angel Torres, Jun Dai, Jehad Abourahma, Duy Le, Archit Dhingra, Simeon Gilbert, P. V. Galiy, T. M. Nenchuk, Dmitry S. Muratov, Talat S. Rahman, Xiao Cheng Zeng, P. A. Dowben, Alexander Sinitskii

2021Advanced Functional Materials19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Theoretical and experimental investigations of various exfoliated samples taken from layered In 4 Se 3 crystals are performed. In spite of the ionic character of interlayer interactions in In 4 Se 3 and hence much higher calculated cleavage energies compared to graphite, it is possible to produce few‐nanometer‐thick flakes of In 4 Se 3 by mechanical exfoliation of its bulk crystals. The In 4 Se 3 flakes exfoliated on Si/SiO 2 have anisotropic electronic properties and exhibit field‐effect electron mobilities of about 50 cm 2 V −1 s −1 at room temperature, which are comparable with other popular transition metal chalcogenide (TMC) electronic materials, such as MoS 2 and TiS 3 . In 4 Se 3 devices exhibit a visible range photoresponse on a timescale of less than 30 ms. The photoresponse depends on the polarization of the excitation light consistent with symmetry‐dependent band structure calculations for the most expected ac cleavage plane. These results demonstrate that mechanical exfoliation of layered ionic In 4 Se 3 crystals is possible, while the fast anisotropic photoresponse makes In 4 Se 3 a competitive electronic material, in the TMC family, for emerging optoelectronic device applications.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceAnisotropyIonic bondingExfoliation jointChalcogenidePolarization (electrochemistry)Cleavage (geology)GraphiteElectronElectronic structureCondensed matter physicsOptoelectronicsNanotechnologyOpticsComposite materialChemistryIonPhysicsPhysical chemistryQuantum mechanicsFracture (geology)Organic chemistryGraphene2D Materials and ApplicationsChalcogenide Semiconductor Thin FilmsQuantum Dots Synthesis And Properties