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Enhancing Photoluminescence and Mobilities in WS2 Monolayers with Oleic Acid Ligands

Authors :
Tanoh, Arelo OA
Alexander-Webber, Jack
Xiao, James
Delport, Géraud
Williams, Cyan A
Bretscher, Hope
Gauriot, Nicolas
Allardice, Jesse
Pandya, Raj
Fan, Ye
Li, Zhaojun
Vignolini, Silvia
Stranks, Samuel D
Hofmann, Stephan
Rao, Akshay
Tanoh, Arelo [0000-0003-2494-5984]
Alexander-Webber, Jack [0000-0002-9374-7423]
Xiao, James [0000-0002-1713-5599]
Williams, Cyan [0000-0002-0218-016X]
Bretscher, Hope [0000-0001-6551-4721]
Allardice, Jesse [0000-0002-1969-7536]
Pandya, Raj [0000-0003-1108-9322]
Fan, Ye [0000-0003-0998-5881]
Vignolini, Silvia [0000-0003-0664-1418]
Stranks, Samuel [0000-0002-8303-7292]
Hofmann, Stephan [0000-0001-6375-1459]
Rao, Akshay [0000-0003-0320-2962]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Nano Letters, Apollo, PubMed Central
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Chemical Society, 2019.

Abstract

Many potential applications of monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) require both high photoluminescence (PL) yield and high electrical mobilities. However, the PL yield of as prepared TMD monolayers is low and believed to be limited by defect sites and uncontrolled doping. This has led to a large effort to develop chemical passivation methods to improve PL and mobilities. The most successful of these treatments is based on the nonoxidizing organic "superacid" bis(trifluoromethane)sulfonimide (TFSI) which has been shown to yield bright monolayers of molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) and tungsten disulfide (WS2) but with trap-limited PL dynamics and no significant improvements in field effect mobilities. Here, using steady-state and time-resolved PL microscopy we demonstrate that treatment of WS2 monolayers with oleic acid (OA) can greatly enhance the PL yield, resulting in bright neutral exciton emission comparable to TFSI treated monolayers. At high excitation densities, the OA treatment allows for bright trion emission, which has not been demonstrated with previous chemical treatments. We show that unlike the TFSI treatment, the OA yields PL dynamics that are largely trap free. In addition, field effect transistors show an increase in mobilities with the OA treatment. These results suggest that OA serves to passivate defect sites in the WS2 monolayers in a manner akin to the passivation of colloidal quantum dots with OA ligands. Our results open up a new pathway to passivate and tune defects in monolayer TMDs using simple "wet" chemistry techniques, allowing for trap-free electronic properties and bright neutral exciton and trion emission.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nano Letters, Apollo, PubMed Central
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8fe2770f7688904b6d4eb6d19f0b1e9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.43046