TY - JOUR
T1 - Digenite (Cu9S5)
T2 - Layered p-Type Semiconductor Grown by Reactive Annealing of Copper
AU - Itzhak, Anat
AU - Teblum, Eti
AU - Girshevitz, Olga
AU - Okashy, Sivan
AU - Turkulets, Yury
AU - Burlaka, Luba
AU - Cohen-Taguri, Gili
AU - Shawat Avraham, Efrat
AU - Noked, Malachi
AU - Shalish, Ilan
AU - Nessim, Gilbert Daniel
N1 - Funding Information:
G.D.N. and M.N. would like to thank the Israel Science Foundation and Israel Prime Minister’s Office fuel alternatives initiative for partial funding of this study under the Israel Research center for Electrochemical Propulsion (INREP) (Grant: ISF 2797/11). O.G. and collaborators thank the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for partial support. E.S.A. would like to thank the Israeli ministry of science, technology, and space for their financial support.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/4/10
Y1 - 2018/4/10
N2 - Most of the recently discovered layered materials such as MoS2 or MoSe2 are n-type, while few materials, such as phosphorene, which suffers from rapid oxidation, are p-type. To form devices such as p-n junctions and heterojunctions, new p-type mono-/few-layers are needed. Here, we report a one-step synthesis of layered, crystalline, p-type copper sulfide by thermal annealing of a standard copper foil in an inert environment using chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Optical spectroscopies (photoluminescence and absorption) show definite correlating features around 2.5 eV. Surface photovoltage spectroscopy shows a photovoltage reduction around the same energy range, which would be expected from a bandgap of a p-type material, and p-type conductivity was also observed using a thermoelectric probe. TEM, XRD, and AFM showed that the synthesized material is layered and has a unique stoichiometry of Cu9S5. Using sonication and dropcasting, we succeeded to isolate few-layers and monolayers. We observed good bulk electrical conductivity and characterized the electrical conductivity of few-layer copper sulfide flakes using peak force tunneling atomic force microscopy (PF-TUNA). We observed an increase in conductivity for increasing number of layers. Given its conductivity and layered morphology, we tested the synthesized Cu9S5 as an electrode for a Li-ion battery. The proposed bottom-up synthesis, which is simple and scalable, allows synthesizing bulk quantities of the p-type layered Cu9S5 which can then be exfoliated (top-down) to deposit monolayer flakes on substrates. Combined with the progress achieved in the preparation of n-type layered materials, this p-type Cu9S5 opens the door to the fabrication of 2D p-n heterojunctions.
AB - Most of the recently discovered layered materials such as MoS2 or MoSe2 are n-type, while few materials, such as phosphorene, which suffers from rapid oxidation, are p-type. To form devices such as p-n junctions and heterojunctions, new p-type mono-/few-layers are needed. Here, we report a one-step synthesis of layered, crystalline, p-type copper sulfide by thermal annealing of a standard copper foil in an inert environment using chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Optical spectroscopies (photoluminescence and absorption) show definite correlating features around 2.5 eV. Surface photovoltage spectroscopy shows a photovoltage reduction around the same energy range, which would be expected from a bandgap of a p-type material, and p-type conductivity was also observed using a thermoelectric probe. TEM, XRD, and AFM showed that the synthesized material is layered and has a unique stoichiometry of Cu9S5. Using sonication and dropcasting, we succeeded to isolate few-layers and monolayers. We observed good bulk electrical conductivity and characterized the electrical conductivity of few-layer copper sulfide flakes using peak force tunneling atomic force microscopy (PF-TUNA). We observed an increase in conductivity for increasing number of layers. Given its conductivity and layered morphology, we tested the synthesized Cu9S5 as an electrode for a Li-ion battery. The proposed bottom-up synthesis, which is simple and scalable, allows synthesizing bulk quantities of the p-type layered Cu9S5 which can then be exfoliated (top-down) to deposit monolayer flakes on substrates. Combined with the progress achieved in the preparation of n-type layered materials, this p-type Cu9S5 opens the door to the fabrication of 2D p-n heterojunctions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85045210839&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b00191
DO - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b00191
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85045210839
SN - 0897-4756
VL - 30
SP - 2379
EP - 2388
JO - Chemistry of Materials
JF - Chemistry of Materials
IS - 7
ER -