Nature Communications (Jul 2024)

Large-scale 2D heterostructures from hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks and graphene with distinct Dirac and flat bands

  • Xin Zhang,
  • Xiaoyin Li,
  • Zhengwang Cheng,
  • Aixi Chen,
  • Pengdong Wang,
  • Xingyue Wang,
  • Xiaoxu Lei,
  • Qi Bian,
  • Shaojian Li,
  • Bingkai Yuan,
  • Jianzhi Gao,
  • Fang-Sen Li,
  • Minghu Pan,
  • Feng Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50211-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The current strategies for building 2D organic-inorganic heterojunctions involve mostly wet-chemistry processes or exfoliation and transfer, leading to interface contaminations, poor crystallizing, or limited size. Here we show a bottom-up procedure to fabricate 2D large-scale heterostructure with clean interface and highly-crystalline sheets. As a prototypical example, a well-ordered hydrogen-bonded organic framework is self-assembled on the highly-oriented-pyrolytic-graphite substrate. The organic framework adopts a honeycomb lattice with faulted/unfaulted halves in a unit cell, resemble to molecular “graphene”. Interestingly, the topmost layer of substrate is self-lifted by organic framework via strong interlayer coupling, to form effectively a floating organic framework/graphene heterostructure. The individual layer of heterostructure inherits its intrinsic property, exhibiting distinct Dirac bands of graphene and narrow bands of organic framework. Our results demonstrate a promising approach to fabricate 2D organic-inorganic heterostructure with large-scale uniformity and highly-crystalline via the self-lifting effect, which is generally applicable to most of van der Waals materials.