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In situ transmission electron microscopy study of the formation and migration of vacancy defects in atomically thin black phosphorus
Yao, Fenfa1,2; Cai, Yongqing3; Xiao, Zhangru2; Zhang, Gang4; Xie, Rong Jun1; Jin, Chuanhong2,5
2021-04-01
Source Publication2D Materials
ISSN2053-1583
Volume8Issue:2Pages:025004
Abstract

Structural defects play an important role in the optimization of material structures and properties, especially in low-dimensional systems such as two-dimensional (2D) materials. In this work, we investigated the formation, aggregation, and diffusion of vacancy defects in atomically thin black phosphorus (BP) via in situ high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. Vacancy defects including di-vacancies (DVs), vacancy clusters (e.g. tetra-vacancy and TV), and vacancy lines were confirmed as the primary forms of structural defects in BP. DV and TV defects were found to be highly mobile. The defects preferentially diffused and migrated along the diagonal and in a zigzag pattern (rather than an armchair pattern). After prolonged thermal excitation and electron-beam irradiation, all these as-formed vacancies tended to aggregate and line up parallel to the zigzag pattern direction to form extended vacancy lines with a total length reaching hundreds of nanometers or even the micrometer scale. Ab initio calculations were conducted to reveal the vacancy migration pathway, energy landscape, and modifications to the electronic structure of the host BP monolayers (MLs). It was found that the migration of a 5-8-5 DV was accomplished via sequential structural transformations including several transitions and intermediate configurations, such as 5-7-7-5 DVs. The associated migration barriers were determined as 2.1 eV for diagonal migration and 2.6 eV along the zigzag path, respectively. Calculations further confirmed that the presence of vacancy defects induced considerable electronic structure modification of the host ML-BP; for example, the bandgap was reduced from 0.9 eV (for defect-free ML-BP) to 0.7 eV in the presence of vacancy lines with a concentration of 1.2 at.%. The present study expands the current understanding of the formation and dynamic behaviors of primary vacancy defects and illustrates methods available to alter the electronic structures of 2D BP materials. It can further serve as a guideline for the function-oriented design and fabrication of BP-based devices via precisely controlled defect engineering.

KeywordVacancy Defects Monolayer Black Phosphorus Transmission Electron Microscopy
DOI10.1088/2053-1583/abce09
URLView the original
Indexed BySCIE
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaMaterials Science
WOS SubjectMaterials Science, Multidisciplinary
WOS IDWOS:000625102300001
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85098684819
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Document TypeJournal article
CollectionINSTITUTE OF APPLIED PHYSICS AND MATERIALS ENGINEERING
Corresponding AuthorZhang, Gang; Xie, Rong Jun; Jin, Chuanhong
Affiliation1.College of Materials, Xiamen University, Xiamen, Fujian, 361005, China
2.State Key Laboratory of Silicon Materials, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310027, China
3.Joint Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education, Institute of Applied Physics and Materials Engineering, University of Macau, Taipa, Macau, People’s Republic of China
4.Institute of High Performance Computing, A∗STAR, Singapore, 138632, Singapore
5.Hunan Institute of Advanced Sensing and Information Technology, Xiangtan University, Xiangtan, Hunan, 411105, China
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Yao, Fenfa,Cai, Yongqing,Xiao, Zhangru,et al. In situ transmission electron microscopy study of the formation and migration of vacancy defects in atomically thin black phosphorus[J]. 2D Materials, 2021, 8(2), 025004.
APA Yao, Fenfa., Cai, Yongqing., Xiao, Zhangru., Zhang, Gang., Xie, Rong Jun., & Jin, Chuanhong (2021). In situ transmission electron microscopy study of the formation and migration of vacancy defects in atomically thin black phosphorus. 2D Materials, 8(2), 025004.
MLA Yao, Fenfa,et al."In situ transmission electron microscopy study of the formation and migration of vacancy defects in atomically thin black phosphorus".2D Materials 8.2(2021):025004.
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