Litcius/Paper detail

Steering on Degrees of Freedom of 2D Van der Waals Heterostructures

Huizhen Zhang, Wenjing Wu, Lin Zhou, Zhen Wu, Jia Zhu

2021Small Science24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

2D heterostructures have garnered tremendous attention for potential applications in electronics and optoelectronics. Heterostructures can be constructed by assembling individual atomically thin layers of 2D materials into integrated devices, which involves three primary degrees of freedom (DOFs), i.e., Lego-like basic building blocks, out-of-plane stacking order, and in-plane twist-angle alignment. By steering the DOFs of 2D materials, devices and structures such as artificial Shockley junction, quantum wells, and superlattices can be conveniently established based on well-developed fabrication and/or assembly techniques, beneficial for next-generation ultracompact information technologies. Herein, the recent progress on constructing the artificial atomic structures by taking advantage of three primary DOFs is overviewed. An outlook of the challenges and future developments is presented as well. Future advancements in the rational construction of complex devices and artificial heterostructures are also suggested.

Topics & Concepts

HeterojunctionStackingDegrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)Nanotechnologyvan der Waals forceElectronicsComputer scienceMaterials sciencePhysicsOptoelectronicsEngineeringElectrical engineeringNuclear magnetic resonanceMoleculeQuantum mechanics2D Materials and ApplicationsGraphene research and applicationsMXene and MAX Phase Materials