Electrochemical Delamination of Ultralarge Few-Layer Black Phosphorus with a Hydrogen-Free Intercalation Mechanism

Adv Mater. 2021 Jan;33(1):e2005815. doi: 10.1002/adma.202005815. Epub 2020 Nov 27.

Abstract

Due to strong interlayer interaction and ease of oxidation issues of black phosphorus (BP), the domain size of artificial synthesized few-layer black phosphorus (FL-BP) crystals is often below 10 µm, which extremely limits its further applications in large-area thin-film devices and integrated circuits. Herein, a hydrogen-free electrochemical delamination strategy through weak Lewis acid intercalation enabled exfoliation is developed to produce ultralarge FL-BP single-crystalline domains with high quality. The interaction between the weak Lewis acid tetra-n-butylammonium acetate (CH3 COOTBA) and P atoms promotes the average domain size of FL-BP crystal up to 77.6 ± 15.0 µm and the largest domain size is found to be as large as 119 µm. The presence of H+ and H2 O is found to sharply decrease the size of as-exfoliated FL-BP flakes. The electronic transport measurements show that the delaminated FL-BP crystals exhibit a high hole mobility of 76 cm2 V-1 s-1 and an on/off ratio of 103 at 298 K. A broadband photoresponse from 532 to 1850 nm with ultrahigh responsivity is achieved. This work provides a scalable, simple, and low-cost approach for large-area BP films that meet industrial requirements for nanodevices applications.

Keywords: black phosphorus; electrochemical exfoliation; hydrogen-free exfoliation; photodetectors.