A research team led by Prof. ZHAO Jiong, Member of the Research Institute for Advanced Manufacturing (RIAM), Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Physics of The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU), has made significant discoveries in the research on 2D ferroelectrics and 2D van der Waals materials. The team unveiled a pioneering approach for the large-scale synthesis of Indium Selenide (In2Se3), and provided new insights into the critical mechanisms that underlie the characteristics of 2D van der Waals materials and bilayer 2D materials.
In2Se3 is a promising 2D ferroelectric material but the large-scale synthesis of 2D In2Se3 films with the desired phase is still lacking. The team utilised transmission electron microscopy (TEM) technique to directly observe and analyse the ferroelectric domains, domain walls and other crucial features at the atomic level within the materials, and have successfully synthesised 2D In2Se3 films with pure phase. The findings were published in Nature Nanotechnology.
Furthermore, the team unveiled the ultra-high plasticity of materials in 2D metal monochalcogenides such as InSe, and the complex vortex patterns with tunable characteristics in twisted-bilayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2). The two findings have been published in Nature Materials and Science, respectively.
These scientific discoveries significantly boost technological advancements in microelectronics, artificial intelligence and quantum information, and has promising prospects for diverse applications including high-density memory devices, energy conversion systems, sensing technologies and catalysis technologies.
The studies were supported by PolyU’s Atomic Transmission Electron Microscopy Laboratory and contributions of the research team of Prof. Daniel LAU Shu-ping, Chair Professor of Nanomaterials and Head of the PolyU Department of Applied Physics; Prof. YANG Ming, Assistant Professor in the PolyU Department of Applied Physics; and Prof. LY Thuc Hue, Associate Professor of the Department of Chemistry of City University of Hong Kong.
Research Units | Research Institute for Advanced Manufacturing |
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