posted on 2024-05-29, 20:29authored byZuteng Wan, Zhiwen Chen, Lei Shi, Anqi Zheng, Jin Min, Cong Shen, Bingfeng Du, Yanhua Guo, Xu Gao, Jiang Yin, Haixiong Ge, Shanyuan Niu, Haiming Lu, Kuibo Yin, Di Wu, Zhiguo Liu, Yidong Xia
Silicon is the cornerstone of electronics and photonics.
In this
context, almost all integrated devices derived from two-dimensional
(2D) materials stay rooted in silicon technology. However, as the
growth substrate, silicon has long been thought to be a hindrance
for growing 2D materials through bottom-up methods that require high
growth temperatures, and thus, indirect routes are usually considered
instead. Although promising growth of large-area 2D materials on silicon
has been demonstrated, the direct growth of single-crystalline materials
using low-thermal-budget synthesis methods remains challenging. Here,
we report the room-temperature growth of millimeter-scale single-crystal
2D metal halides on silicon substrates with a hydroxyl-terminated
surface. Theoretical calculations reveal that the activation energy
for surface diffusion can be reduced by an order of magnitude by terminating
the surface with hydroxyl groups, from which on-silicon growth is
greatly facilitated at room temperature and enables a 4-order-of-magnitude
increase in area. The high quality and uniformity of the resulting
single crystals are further evidenced. The optoelectronic devices
employing the as-grown materials show an ultralow dark current of
10<sup>–13</sup> A and a high detectivity of 10<sup>13</sup> Jones, thereby corroborating a weak-light detection ability. These
results would point to a rich space of surface modulation that can
be used to surmount current limitations and demonstrate a promising
strategy for growing 2D materials directly on silicon at room temperature
to produce large single crystals.