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Robotically Manufactured Complex van der Waals Heterostructures for Interlayer-Angle-Controlled Combinatorial Solids

ORAL

Abstract

Advancements in the production & processing of 2D materials (2DMs) have been building towards creating complex inter/intra-layer solids, where each specifically-shaped constituent layer amalgamates into a structure that controls X/Y/Z/θ in totality. This is the same design paradigm used in evaporated films for conventional integrated circuits — we use this philosophy to develop our new technique for manufacturing 2DMs combinatorial solids. The technique has three steps: wafer-scale synthesis, polymer-contact-free patterning, and high vacuum dry-transfer automation. We use this to assemble designer van der Waals solids where each spatial region programmatically alters layer number & permuted composition. These solids function as optical spectroscopy assays, where we can study incremental changes in optical response. This technique achieves an unprecedented stacking rate (30 layers/hr) for large-area layers (100 μm)2 with few-μm X/Y resolution and <0.2° angle precision. We can also fabricate twisted N-layers; in one instance we observe atomic reconstruction of twisted 4-layer WS2 at twist angles of ≥4°. Compatibility with pre-fabricated electrodes & multiplexed assembly also imply this technique can parallel manufacture complex electrical circuits without ever breaking vacuum.

Presenters

  • Andrew Ye

    University of Chicago

Authors

  • Andrew Ye

    University of Chicago

  • Andrew J Mannix

    Stanford University

  • Suk Hyun Sung

    University of Michigan

  • Ariana Ray

    Cornell University, Department of Physics, Cornell University

  • Fauzia Mujid

    University of Chicago, Department of Chemistry, University of Chicago, The University of Chicago

  • Chibeom Park

    University of Chicago

  • Myungjae Lee

    University of Chicago, James Franck Institute, University of Chicago

  • Jong Hoon Kang

    University of Chicago, Department of Chemistry, University of Chicago

  • Robert T Shreiner

    University of Chicago

  • Alexander A High

    University of Chicago

  • David A Muller

    Cornell University, School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University

  • Robert Hovden

    University of Michigan

  • Jiwoong Park

    University of Chicago, Department of Chemistry, University of Chicago