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High-refractive index and mechanically cleavable non-van der Waals InGaS3

Authors :
Toksumakov, Adilet N.
Ermolaev, Georgy A.
Slavich, Alexander S.
Doroshina, Natalia V.
Sukhanova, Ekaterina V.
Yakubovsky, Dmitry I.
Novikov, Sergey M.
Oreshonkov, Alexander S.
Tsymbarenko, Dmitry M.
Popov, Zakhar I.
Kvashnin, Dmitry G.
Vyshnevyy, Andrey A.
Arsenin, Aleksey V.
Ghazaryan, Davit A.
Volkov, Valentyn S.
Source :
npj 2D Materials and Applications volume 6, Article number: 85 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The growing families of two-dimensional crystals derived from naturally occurring van der Waals materials offer an unprecedented platform to investigate elusive physical phenomena and could be of use in a diverse range of devices. Of particular interest are recently reported atomic sheets of non-van der Waals materials, which could allow a better comprehension of the nature of structural bonds and increase the functionality of prospective heterostructures. Here, we study the optostructural properties of ultrathin non-van der Waals InGaS3 sheets produced by standard mechanical cleavage. Our ab initio calculation results suggest an emergence of authentically delicate out-of-plane covalent bonds within its unit cell, and, as a consequence, an artificial generation of layered structure within the material. Those yield to singular layer isolation energies of around 50 meVA-2, which is comparable with the conventional van der Waals material's monolayer isolation energies of 20 - 60 meVA-2. In addition, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the structural, vibrational, and optical properties of the materials presenting that it is a wide bandgap (2.73 eV) semiconductor with a high-refractive index (higher than 2.5) and negligible losses in the visible and infrared spectral ranges. It makes it a perfect candidate for further establishment of visible-range all-dielectric nanophotonics.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
npj 2D Materials and Applications volume 6, Article number: 85 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2205.02715
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-022-00359-9