posted on 2024-06-05, 13:34authored byYuling Yin, Jia Li, Feng Ding
The inert gold substrate is one of the most commonly
used substrates
for synthesizing transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), while the
growth mechanism of TMDCs on gold substrates in a sulfur-rich environment
is still unclear. Based on density functional theory calculations,
we explored the reconstruction of the gold surface in a sulfur-rich
environment, which is one of the conditions for the growth of TMDCs.
We clearly revealed that both Au(100) and Au(111) surfaces tend to
form metal sulfide buffer layers between TMDCs and the metallic substrate,
which are the square pattern of Au4S4 on Au(100) surface and the hexagonal
pattern of Au6S6 on Au(111) surface, respectively. In the sulfur-rich
environment, both square and hexagonal patterns are energetically
highly stable, greatly weakening the interaction between TMDCs and
the substrate. Interestingly, both buffer layers inherit the symmetry
of the substrate and thus have no significant effect on the growth
behavior of TMDCs. This study explains many experimental puzzles and
elucidates the growth behavior of 2D materials on various substrates.