Litcius/Paper detail

Supertwisted spirals of layered materials enabled by growth on non-Euclidean surfaces

Yuzhou Zhao, Chenyu Zhang, Daniel D. Kohler, Jason M. Scheeler, John C. Wright, Paul M. Voyles, Song Jin

2020Science137 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Using curves to make twists The growth of layered materials on flat substrates usually occurs in stacked layers, although defects or a lattice mismatch can induce strains that distort the shape of subsequent layers. However, these effects are usually small and can be uncontrolled. Zhao et al. now demonstrate the possibility of synthesizing multilayers of two-dimensional materials with certain twists between the layers induced by the presence of screw dislocations in combination with curved substrate surfaces. Different twist angles are achieved by varying the amount of nonplanarity and the character (conical or hyperbolic) of the surface. Science , this issue p. 442

Topics & Concepts

Euclidean geometryMaterials scienceNanotechnologyGeometryMathematicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics2D Materials and ApplicationsAdhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions