Abstract

Large area van der Waals (vdW) thin films are assembled materials consisting of a network of randomly stacked nanosheets. The multiscale structure and the two-dimensional (2D) nature of the building block mean that interfaces naturally play a crucial role in the charge transport of such thin films. While single or few stacked nanosheets (i.e., vdW heterostructures) have been the subject of intensive works, little is known about how charges travel through multilayered, more disordered networks. Here, we report a comprehensive study of a prototypical system given by networks of randomly stacked reduced graphene oxide 2D nanosheets, whose chemical and geometrical properties can be controlled independently, permitting to explore percolated networks ranging from a single nanosheet to some billions with room-temperature resistivity spanning from 10-5 to 10-1 Ω·m. We systematically observe a clear transition between two different regimes at a critical temperature T*: Efros-Shklovskii variable-range hopping (ES-VRH) below T* and power law behavior above. First, we demonstrate that the two regimes are strongly correlated with each other, both depending on the charge localization length ξ, calculated by the ES-VRH model, which corresponds to the characteristic size of overlapping sp2 domains belonging to different nanosheets. Thus, we propose a microscopic model describing the charge transport as a geometrical phase transition, given by the metal-insulator transition associated with the percolation of quasi-one-dimensional nanofillers with length ξ, showing that the charge transport behavior of the networks is valid for all geometries and defects of the nanosheets, ultimately suggesting a generalized description on vdW and disordered thin films.

Highlights

  • Large area van der Waals thin films are assembled materials consisting of a network of randomly stacked nanosheets

  • These solutions were spun onto SiO2 substrates at different concentrations, followed by a sample’s reduction via thermal annealing at increasing °C up to 940 °C) for 60 min temperature at a vacuum

  • By taking advantage of the exceptional processability and tunability of sizes and properties, reduced graphene oxide (RGO) was used as a prototypical building block to study charge transport (CT) in van der Waals (vdW) thin films given by percolated networks of pure 2D nanosheets stacked over each other, yielding aconductive material with a strongly anisotropy and tunable structure

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Summary

Introduction

Large area van der Waals (vdW) thin films are assembled materials consisting of a network of randomly stacked nanosheets. For RGO networks, we can clearly distinguish two regimes separated by a transition temperature (T*): a linear trend with a negative slope similar to that measured in single sheets for T < T* and a constant trend corresponding to PL for T > T*.

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