Abstract
Ionic layer epitaxy (ILE) has recently been developed as an effective strategy to synthesize nanometer thick 2D materials with a nonlayered crystal structure, such as ZnO. The packing density of the amphiphilic monolayer is believed to be a key parameter that controls the nanosheet nucleation and growth. In this work, we systematically investigated the growth behavior of single-crystalline ZnO nanosheets templated at the water-air interface by an anionic oleylsulfate monolayer with different packing densities. The thicknesses of ZnO nanosheets were tuned from one unit cell to four unit cells and exhibited good correlation with the width of Zn2+ ion concentration zone (the Stern layer) underneath the ionized surfactant monolayer. Further analysis of the nanosheet sizes and density revealed that the nanosheet growth was dominated by the steric hindrance from the surfactant monolayer at lower surface pressure, while the nucleation density became the dominating factor at higher surface pressure. The ZnO nanosheets exhibited a decreasing work function as the thickness reduced to a few unit cells. This research validated a critical hypothesis that the nanosheet growth is self-limited by the formation of a double layer of ionic precursors. This work will open up a new way toward controlled synthesis of novel 2D nanosheets from nonlayered materials with a thickness down to one unit cell.
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