Photonics in Multimaterial Lateral Heterostructures Combining Group IV Chalcogenide van der Waals Semiconductors

Small. 2024 May;20(20):e2307372. doi: 10.1002/smll.202307372. Epub 2023 Dec 6.

Abstract

Lateral heterostructures combining two multilayer group IV chalcogenide van der Waals semiconductors have attracted interest for optoelectronics, twistronics, and valleytronics, owing to their structural anisotropy, bulk-like electronic properties, enhanced optical thickness, and vertical interfaces enabling in-plane charge manipulation/separation, perpendicular to the trajectory of incident light. Group IV monochalcogenides support propagating photonic waveguide modes, but their interference gives rise to complex light emission patterns throughout the visible/near-infrared range both in uniform flakes and single-interface lateral heterostructures. Here, this work demonstrates the judicious integration of pure and alloyed monochalcogenide crystals into multimaterial heterostructures with unique photonic properties, notably the ability to select photonic modes with targeted discrete energies through geometric factors rather than band engineering. SnS-GeS1-xSex-GeSe-GeS1-xSex heterostructures with a GeS1-xSex active layer sandwiched laterally between GeSe and SnS, semiconductors with similar optical constants but smaller bandgaps, were designed and realized via sequential vapor transport synthesis. Raman spectroscopy, electron microscopy/diffraction, and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy confirm a high crystal quality of the laterally stitched components with sharp interfaces. Nanometer-scale cathodoluminescence spectroscopy provides evidence for a facile transfer of electron-hole pairs across the lateral interfaces and demonstrates the selection of photon emission at discrete energies in the laterally embedded active (GeS1- xSex) part of the heterostructure.

Keywords: 2D layered crystals; cathodoluminescence; group IV chalcogenides; interfaces; lateral epitaxy; lateral heterostructures; photonic waveguide modes.