MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN06.08.08 2023 MRS Fall Meeting

Edge Engineering of Two-Dimensional Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

When and Where

Nov 30, 2023
11:00am - 11:15am

Hynes, Level 3, Room 306

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Guoxiang Hu1

Georgia Institute of Technology1

Abstract

Guoxiang Hu1

Georgia Institute of Technology1
Two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) have attracted tremendous interest as functional materials due to their exceptionally diverse and tunable properties, especially in their edges. In addition to the conventional armchair and zigzag edges common to hexagonal 2D materials, more complex edge reconstructions can be realized through careful control over the synthesis conditions. However, the whole family of synthesizable, reconstructed edges remains poorly studied. Here, we develop a computational approach integrating ensemble-generation, force-relaxation, and electronic-structure calculations to systematically and efficiently discover additional reconstructed edges and screen their functional properties. Using MoS<sub>2</sub> as a model system, we screened hundreds of edge-reconstruction to discover over 160 reconstructed edges to be more stable than the conventional ones. More excitingly, we discovered new synthesizable reconstructred edges with record thermodynamic stability, in addition to successfully reproducing recently synthesized edges. We also find our predicted reconstructed edges to have multi-functional properties—they show near optimal hydrogen evolution activity over the conventional edges, ideal for catalyzing hydrogen-evolution reaction (HER) and also exhibit half-metallicity with a broad variation in magnetic moments, making them uniquely suitable for nanospintronic applications. Our work reveals the existence of a wide family of synthesizable, reconstructed edges in 2D TMDCs and opens a new materials-by-design paradigm of ‘intrinsic’ edge engineering multifunctionality in 2D materials.

Keywords

reactivity

Symposium Organizers

Aron Huckaba, University of Kentucky
Cecilia Mattevi, Imperial College London
Elisa Riedo, New York University
Christopher Sutton, University of South Carolina

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature