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Femtosecond Laser-Driven Phase Engineering of WS2 for Nano-Periodic Phase Patterning and Sub-ppm Ammonia Gas Sensing

  • School of Mechatronics Engineering, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Harbin Institute of Technology
  • CAS - Shanghai Institute of Ceramics
  • Harbin Institute of Technology
  • School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen)

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Laser-driven phase transition of 2D transition metal dichalcogenides has attracted much attention due to its high flexibility and rapidity. However, there are some limitations during the laser irradiation process, especially the unsatisfied surface ablation, the inability of nanoscale phase patterning, and the unexploited physical properties of new phase. In this work, the well-controlled femtosecond (fs) laser-driven transformation from the metallic 2M-WS2 to the semiconducting 2H-WS2 is reported, which is confirmed to be a single-crystal to single-crystal transition without layer thinning or obvious ablation. Moreover, a highly ordered 2H/2M nano-periodic phase transition with a resolution of ≈435 nm is achieved, breaking through the existing size bottleneck of laser-driven phase transition, which is attributed to the selective deposition of plasmon energy induced by fs laser. It is also demonstrated that the achieved 2H-WS2 after laser irradiation contains rich sulfur vacancies, which exhibits highly competitive ammonia gas sensing performance, with a detection limit below 0.1 ppm and a fast response/recovery time of 43/67 s at room temperature. This study provides a new strategy for the preparation of the phase-selective transition homojunction and high-performance applications in electronics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2303654
JournalSmall
Volume19
Issue number45
DOIs
StatePublished - 8 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • femtosecond lasers
  • gas sensors
  • nano-periodic phase transition
  • phase engineering
  • sulfur vacancy
  • tungsten disulfide

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