Two-dimensional (2D) materials exhibit many exciting phenomena that make them promising as materials for
future electronic, optoelectronic, and mechanical devices. Because of their atomic thinness, interfaces play a dominant role in
determining material behavior. In order to observe and exploit the unique properties of these materials, it is therefore vital to
obtain clean and repeatable interfaces. However, the conventional mechanical stacking of atomically thin layers typically leads to
trapped contaminants and spatially inhomogeneous interfaces, which obscure the true intrinsic behavior. This work presents a
simple and generic approach to create clean 2D material interfaces in mechanically stacked structures. The operating principle is
to use an AFM tip to controllably squeeze contaminants out from between 2D layers and their substrates, similar to a “squeegee”.
This approach leads to drastically improved homogeneity and consistency of 2D material interfaces, as demonstrated by AFM
topography and significant reduction of photoluminescence line widths. Also, this approach enables emission from interlayer
excitons, demonstrating that the technique enhances interlayer coupling in van der Waals heterostructures. The technique
enables repeatable observation of intrinsic 2D material properties, which is crucial for the continued development of these
promising materials.
Perpustakaan Digital ITB