posted on 2020-03-17, 15:38authored byMagdalena
O. Cichocka, Maarten Bolhuis, Sabrya E. van Heijst, Sonia Conesa-Boj
Layered
materials (LMs) such as graphene or MoS2 have
attracted a great deal of interest recently. These materials offer
unique functionalities due to their structural anisotropy characterized
by weak van der Waals bonds along the out-of-plane axis and covalent
bonds in the in-plane direction. A central requirement to access the
structural information on complex nanostructures built upon LMs is
to control the relative orientation of each sample prior to their
inspection, e.g., with transmission electron microscopy (TEM). However,
developing sample preparation methods that result in large inspection
areas and ensure full control over the sample orientation while avoiding
damage during the transfer to the TEM grid is challenging. Here, we
demonstrate the feasibility of deploying ultramicrotomy for the preparation
of LM samples in TEM analyses. We show how ultramicrotomy leads to
the reproducible large-scale production of both in-plane and out-of-plane
cross sections, with bulk vertically oriented MoS2 and
WS2 nanosheets as a proof of concept. The robustness of
the prepared samples is subsequently verified by their characterization
by means of both high-resolution TEM and Raman spectroscopy measurements.
Our approach is fully general and should find applications for a wide
range of materials as well as of techniques beyond TEM, thus paving
the way to the systematic large-area mass-production of cross-sectional
specimens for structural and compositional studies.