Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have developed a new method for producing atomically thin semiconducting crystals that could one day enable more powerful and compact electronic devices.

By using specially treated silicon surfaces to tailor the crystals' size and shape, the researchers have found a potentially faster and less expensive way to produce next-generation semiconductor crystals for microchips. The crystalline materials produced this way could in turn enable new scientific discoveries and accelerate technological developments in quantum computing, consumer electronics, and higher efficiency solar cells and batteries.

"Having a method to sculpt crystals at the nanoscale precisely, quickly, and without the need for traditional top-down processes, presents major advantages for widespread utilization of nanomaterials in technology applications," said Thomas J. Kempa, a chemistry professor at Johns Hopkins University who directed the research.

Kempa's team first doused silicon substrates — the supports widely used in industrial settings to process semiconductors into devices — with phosphine gas. When crystals were coaxed to grow on the phosphine-treated silicon supports, the researchers discovered that they grew into structures that were far smaller and of higher quality than crystals prepared through traditional means.

They discovered that the reaction of phosphine with the silicon support caused the formation of a new "designer surface." This surface spurred the crystals to grow as horizontal "ribbons" as opposed to the planar and triangular-shaped sheets that are typically produced. Moreover, the uniform complexion and clean-edged structure of these ribbons rivaled the quality of nanocrystals prepared through industry-standard patterning and etching processes, which are often laborious, lengthy, and expensive, Kempa said.

The nanocrystals prepared in this study are called transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). Like graphene, TMDs have enjoyed widespread attention for possessing powerful properties that are a unique consequence of their "two-dimensional" scale. But conventional processing methods struggle to readily alter the texture of TMDs in ways that suit new discoveries and the development of better-performing technologies. Notably, the versions of TMDs that Kempa and his team were able to create were so small that they dubbed them "one-dimensional" to differentiate them from the usual two-dimensional sheets most researchers are familiar with.

Materials processing limitations are one reason why Moore's Law has been slowing in recent years. The rule, posed in 1965 by Intel co-founder Gordon E. Moore, states that the number of transistors, and their performance, in a dense integrated circuit will double approximately every two years. Packing so many micron-sized transistors into integrated circuits, is the reason that consumer electronics have gotten steadily smaller, faster, and smarter over the past few decades. However, the semiconductor industry is now struggling to maintain that pace.

Notable features of the crystals prepared by Kempa and his team include:

  • Their highly uniform atomic structure and quality stems from the fact that they were synthesized as opposed to fabricated through the traditional methods of patterning and etching. The elegant quality of these crystals could render them more efficient at conducting and converting energy in solar cells or catalysts.
  • Researchers were able to directly grow the crystals to their precise specifications by changing the amount of phosphine.
  • The "designer substrate" is "modular," meaning that academic and industrial labs could use this technology in conjunction with other existing crystal growth processes to make new materials.
  • The "designer substrates" are also reusable, saving money and time on processing.
  • The resulting ribbon-shaped, one-dimensional crystals emit light whose color can be tuned by adjusting the ribbon width, indicating their potential promise in quantum information applications.

This method can "sculpt nanoscale crystals in ways that were not readily possible before," said Kempa. "Such precise synthetic control of crystal size at these length scales is unprecedented. Our method could save substantial processing time and money. The ability to control these crystals at will could be enabling of applications in energy storage, quantum computing, and quantum cryptography.”

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