Abstract

We demonstrate a high-pressure soft sputtering technique that can grow large area 1T′ phase MoTe2 sheets on HOPG and Al2O3 substrates at temperatures as low as 300 °C. The results show that a single Mo/Te co-sputtering step on heated substrates produces highly defected films as a result of the low Te sticking coefficient. The stoichiometry is significantly improved when a 2-step technique is used, which first co-sputters Mo and Te onto an unheated substrate and then anneals the deposited material to crystalize it into 1T′ phase MoTe2. A MoTe2−x 1T′ film with the lowest Te vacancy content (x = 0.14) was synthesized using a 300 °C annealing step, but a higher processing temperature was prohibited due to MoTe2 decomposition with an activation energy of 80.7 kJ mol−1. However, additional ex situ thermal processing at ∼1 torr tellurium pressure can further reduce the Te-vacancy (VTe) concentration, resulting in an improvement in the composition from MoTe1.86 to MoTe1.9. Hall measurements indicate that the films produced with the 2-step in situ process are n-type with a carrier concentration of 4.6 × 1014 cm−2 per layer, presumably from the large VTe concentration stabilizing the 1T′ over the 2H phase. Our findings (a) demonstrate that large scale synthesis of tellurium based vdW materials is possible using industrial growth and processing techniques and (b) accentuate the challenges in producing stoichiometric MoTe2 thin films.

Highlights

  • View Article OnlineLow-temperature synthesis of 2D anisotropic MoTe2 using a high-pressure soft sputtering technique†

  • Two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have attracted much attention owing to their unique quantum properties ranging from excitonics[3,4,5] to Weyl fermions[6,7] and to charge density waves.[7,8,9]

  • TMDs made from group VIB Mo and W metals, such as MoS2 and WSe2 are direct gap excitonic semiconductors with strong exciton binding energies as large as 0.5 eV

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Summary

View Article Online

Low-temperature synthesis of 2D anisotropic MoTe2 using a high-pressure soft sputtering technique†. We demonstrate a high-pressure soft sputtering technique that can grow large area 1T0 phase MoTe2 sheets on HOPG and Al2O3 substrates at temperatures as low as 300 C. The stoichiometry is significantly improved when a 2-step technique is used, which first cosputters Mo and Te onto an unheated substrate and anneals the deposited material to crystalize it into 1T0 phase MoTe2. Hall measurements indicate that the films produced with the 2-step in situ process are n-type with a carrier concentration of 4.6 Â 1014 cmÀ2 per layer, presumably from the large VTe concentration stabilizing the 1T0 over the 2H phase. Our findings (a) demonstrate that large scale synthesis of tellurium based vdW materials is possible using industrial growth and processing techniques and (b) accentuate the challenges in producing stoichiometric MoTe2 thin films

Introduction
Sticking coefficient and decomposition rate
Improving the stoichiometry by high pressure Te annealing
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