Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Epitaxy of wafer-scale single-crystal MoS2 monolayer via buffer layer control

  • Lu Li,
  • Qinqin Wang,
  • Fanfan Wu,
  • Qiaoling Xu,
  • Jinpeng Tian,
  • Zhiheng Huang,
  • Qinghe Wang,
  • Xuan Zhao,
  • Qinghua Zhang,
  • Qinkai Fan,
  • Xiuzhen Li,
  • Yalin Peng,
  • Yangkun Zhang,
  • Kunshan Ji,
  • Aomiao Zhi,
  • Huacong Sun,
  • Mingtong Zhu,
  • Jundong Zhu,
  • Nianpeng Lu,
  • Ying Lu,
  • Shuopei Wang,
  • Xuedong Bai,
  • Yang Xu,
  • Wei Yang,
  • Na Li,
  • Dongxia Shi,
  • Lede Xian,
  • Kaihui Liu,
  • Luojun Du,
  • Guangyu Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46170-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), an emergent two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor, holds great promise for transcending the fundamental limits of silicon electronics and continue the downscaling of field-effect transistors. To realize its full potential and high-end applications, controlled synthesis of wafer-scale monolayer MoS2 single crystals on general commercial substrates is highly desired yet challenging. Here, we demonstrate the successful epitaxial growth of 2-inch single-crystal MoS2 monolayers on industry-compatible substrates of c-plane sapphire by engineering the formation of a specific interfacial reconstructed layer through the S/MoO3 precursor ratio control. The unidirectional alignment and seamless stitching of MoS2 domains across the entire wafer are demonstrated through cross-dimensional characterizations ranging from atomic- to centimeter-scale. The epitaxial monolayer MoS2 single crystal shows good wafer-scale uniformity and state-of-the-art quality, as evidenced from the ~100% phonon circular dichroism, exciton valley polarization of ~70%, room-temperature mobility of ~140 cm2v−1s−1, and on/off ratio of ~109. Our work provides a simple strategy to produce wafer-scale single-crystal 2D semiconductors on commercial insulator substrates, paving the way towards the further extension of Moore’s law and industrial applications of 2D electronic circuits.