Probing Interfacial Interactions Between MoS<sub>2</sub> and Ti<sub>3</sub>C<sub>2</sub> MXene via Raman Spectroscopy
POSTER
Abstract
The MoS2/Ti3C2 MXene heterostructures have recently emerged to be an interesting structure in electronics and as a catalyst. Compared to MoS2, the MoS2/Ti3C2 MXene stack has demonstrated improved performance in catalytic and tribological applications. In this work, we use Raman Spectroscopy to study the influence of Ti3C2 MXene, as a substrate, on the lattice vibrational modes of MoS2.
We stacked atomically thin MoS2 to a bulk Ti3C2 film synthesized from two different etching solutions, NaF-HCl and KF-HCl. We found that both fingerprint peaks, A1g and E12g modes, exhibit substantial shifts on the Ti3C2. The shifts increase with annealing time, which indicates the interfacial interaction between MoS2 and Ti3C2 influences the intralayer vibrations in MoS2. We attribute the red-shifted E12g mode to the strain effect, which arises upon releasing the monolayer MoS2 flake on the Ti3C2 film. The A1g mode shows opposite shifts from the two sources: it blue-shifts on the film prepared by NaF-HCl solution and red-shifts on the film etched in the KF-HCl solution. We attribute the blue-shifted A1g peak to the increased out-of-plane force constants due to the presence of Ti3C2 and the redshift to a combined effect of strain and electron-doping from the trapped ions. Our results unveil the unique substrate effect from Ti3C2 MXene on MoS2.
We stacked atomically thin MoS2 to a bulk Ti3C2 film synthesized from two different etching solutions, NaF-HCl and KF-HCl. We found that both fingerprint peaks, A1g and E12g modes, exhibit substantial shifts on the Ti3C2. The shifts increase with annealing time, which indicates the interfacial interaction between MoS2 and Ti3C2 influences the intralayer vibrations in MoS2. We attribute the red-shifted E12g mode to the strain effect, which arises upon releasing the monolayer MoS2 flake on the Ti3C2 film. The A1g mode shows opposite shifts from the two sources: it blue-shifts on the film prepared by NaF-HCl solution and red-shifts on the film etched in the KF-HCl solution. We attribute the blue-shifted A1g peak to the increased out-of-plane force constants due to the presence of Ti3C2 and the redshift to a combined effect of strain and electron-doping from the trapped ions. Our results unveil the unique substrate effect from Ti3C2 MXene on MoS2.
Publication: Planned paper entitled "Raman Spectroscopy of MoS2 on Ti3C2: the Substrate Effect" with manuscript currently in preparation
Presenters
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Ethan Pollack
Tulane University
Authors
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Ethan Pollack
Tulane University
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Qiaohui Zhou
Tulane University
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Kenneth Agbakansi
Tulane University
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Ahmad Majed
Tulane University
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Fei Wang
Tulane University
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Elham Loni
Tulane University
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Ali Soleymani
Tulane University
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Melena Busse
Tulane University
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Michael Naguib
Department of Physics and Engineering Physics, Tulane University, Tulane University
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Xin Lu
Tulane University