Monomolecular Membrane-Assisted Growth of Antimony Halide Perovskite/MoS2 Van der Waals Epitaxial Heterojunctions with Long-Lived Interlayer Exciton.

Zhicheng Zhou,Juntong Zhu,Lutao Li, Chen Wang, Changwen Zhang, Xinyu Du,Xiangyi Wang,Guoxiang Zhao, Ruonan Wang,Jiating Li,Zheng Lu, Yi Zong,Yinghui Sun,Mark H Rümmeli,Guifu Zou

ACS nano(2024)

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Abstract
Epitaxial growth stands as a key method for integrating semiconductors into heterostructures, offering a potent avenue to explore the electronic and optoelectronic characteristics of cutting-edge materials, such as transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) and perovskites. Nevertheless, the layer-by-layer growth atop TMD materials confronts a substantial energy barrier, impeding the adsorption and nucleation of perovskite atoms on the 2D surface. Here, we epitaxially grown an inorganic lead-free perovskite on TMD and formed van der Waals (vdW) heterojunctions. Our work employs a monomolecular membrane-assisted growth strategy that reduces the contact angle and simultaneously diminishing the energy barrier for Cs3Sb2Br9 surface nucleation. By controlling the nucleation temperature, we achieved a reduction in the thickness of the Cs3Sb2Br9 epitaxial layer from 30 to approximately 4 nm. In the realm of inorganic lead-free perovskite and TMD heterojunctions, we observed long-lived interlayer exciton of 9.9 ns, approximately 36 times longer than the intralayer exciton lifetime, which benefited from the excellent interlayer coupling brought by direct epitaxial growth. Our research introduces a monomolecular membrane-assisted growth strategy that expands the diversity of materials attainable through vdW epitaxial growth, potentially contributing to future applications in optoelectronics involving heterojunctions.
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