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Electrical Breakdown of Suspended Mono- and Few-Layer Tungsten Disulfide via Sulfur Depletion Identified by in Situ Atomic Imaging

Authors :
Mark H. Rümmeli
Qu Chen
Yingqiu Zhou
Xiaowei Zhang
Haimei Zheng
Ye Fan
Jamie H. Warner
Nigel D. Browning
Alex W. Robertson
Source :
ACS Nano. 11:9435-9444
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.

Abstract

The high-bias and breakdown behavior of suspended mono- and few-layer WS2 was explored by in situ aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy. The suspended WS2 devices were found to undergo irreversible breakdown at sufficiently high biases due to vaporization of the WS2. Simultaneous to the removal of WS2 was the accompanying formation of few-layer graphene decorated with W and WS2 nanoparticles, with the carbon source attributed to organic residues present on the WS2 surface. The breakdown of few-layer WS2 resulted in the formation of faceted S-depleted WS2 tendrils along the vaporization boundary, which were found to exhibit lattice contraction indicative of S depletion, alongside pure W phases incorporated into the structure, with the interfaces imaged at atomic resolution. The combination of observing the graphitization of the amorphous carbon surface residue, W nanoparticles, and S-depleted WS2 phases following the high-bias WS2 disintegration all indicate a thermal Joule heating breakdown mechanism over an avalanche process, with WS2 destruction promoted by preferential S emission. The observation of graphene formation and the role the thin amorphous carbon layer has in the prebreakdown behavior of the device demonstrate the importance of employing encapsulated heterostructure device architectures that exclude residues.

Details

ISSN :
1936086X and 19360851
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Nano
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ab08d136116c86c5b74ff842970545b6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b05080