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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Atomic Scale Characterizations of Two-dimensional Anisotropic Materials and Their Heterostructures

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: There has been a surge in two-dimensional (2D) materials field since the discovery of graphene in 2004. Recently, a new class of layered atomically thin materials that exhibit in-plane structural anisotropy, such as black phosphorous, transition metal trichalcogenides and rhenium dichalcogenides (ReS2), have attracted great attention. The reduced symmetry in these novel 2D materials gives rise to highly anisotropic physical properties that enable unique applications in next-gen electronics and optoelectronics. For example, higher carrier mobility along one preferential crystal direction for anisotropic field effect transistors and anisotropic photon absorption for polarization-sensitive photodetectors. This dissertation endeavors to address two key challenges towards practical application of anisotropic materials. One is the scalable production of high quality 2D anisotropic thin films, and the other is the controllability over anisotropy present in synthesized crystals. The investigation is focused primarily on rhenium disulfide because of its chemical similarity to conventional 2D transition metal dichalcogenides and yet anisotropic nature. Carefully designed vapor phase deposition has been demonstrated effective for batch synthesis of high quality ReS2 monolayer. Heteroepitaxial growth proves to be a feasible route for controlling anisotropic directions. Scanning/transmission electron microscopy and angle-resolved Raman spectroscopy have been extensively applied to reveal the structure-property relationship in synthesized 2D anisotropic layers and their heterostructures. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Materials Science and Engineering 2018
2

Rhenium disulfide and rhenium-doped MoS2 thin films from single source precursors

Al-Dulaimi, Naktal January 2018 (has links)
The doping of rhenium into molybdenum disulfide was achieved by Aerosol Assisted Chemical Vapour Deposition (AACVD) from single source precursors. Rhenium can be studied as a model for immobilization of radioactive technetium-99 (99Tc) in MoS2. The metals Mo(IV), Re(IV), and Tc(IV) have similar ionic radii 0.65, 0.63 and 0.65 Å respectively, and their Shannon-Prewitt crystal radii 0.79, 0.77 and 0.79 Å Hence demonstrating the potential storage of nuclear waste in geologic like formations in of groundwater may be possible. The interaction between the nuclear waste forms and groundwater, which could lead to release and transport low concentrations or vapour of radionuclides to the near field, as a result, decomposition of engineered barriers. The molecular precursors [Mo(S2CNEt2)4], [Re3(μ-SiPr)3(SiPr)6], [Re(S2CC6H5)(S3CC6H5)2], and [Re2(μ-S)2(S2CNEt2)4] have been used to deposit Re-doped MoS2 thin films. Mo-doped ReS2 alloyed, polycrystalline thin films were synthesised using [Re(S2CC6H5)(S3CC6H5)2], [Mo(S2CNEt2)4] via AACVD, adding with a low concentration of Mo source for the first time . We reported as well a new way for production of ultrathin ReS2 nanosheets by coupling bottom up processing AACVD with top-down LPE. This is important in synthetic pathways for the production of rare transition dichalcogenide, also, our processing methodology is potentially scalable and thus could be a way to commercial exploitation. Characterisation of produced materials performed by pXRD, SEM, TEM, STEM, EDX, ICP and Raman spectroscopy.

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