4.7 Article

The Creation of True Two-Dimensional Silicon Carbide

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11071799

Keywords

two-dimensional materials; silicon carbide; siligraphene; semiconductors; graphene

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science [89233218CNA000001, DE-NA-0003525]

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This study reports the successful synthesis of true two-dimensional silicon carbide using a top-down approach. The isolated 2D SiC nanosheets are environmentally stable and show potential for applications in light-emitting devices. The thickness of the nanosheets showed a strong correlation with the intensity of the longitudinal optical Raman mode.
This paper reports the successful synthesis of true two-dimensional silicon carbide using a top-down synthesis approach. Theoretical studies have predicted that 2D SiC has a stable planar structure and is a direct band gap semiconducting material. Experimentally, however, the growth of 2D SiC has challenged scientists for decades because bulk silicon carbide is not a van der Waals layered material. Adjacent atoms of SiC bond together via covalent sp(3) hybridization, which is much stronger than van der Waals bonding in layered materials. Additionally, bulk SiC exists in more than 250 polytypes, further complicating the synthesis process, and making the selection of the SiC precursor polytype extremely important. This work demonstrates, for the first time, the successful isolation of 2D SiC from hexagonal SiC via a wet exfoliation method. Unlike many other 2D materials such as silicene that suffer from environmental instability, the created 2D SiC nanosheets are environmentally stable, and show no sign of degradation. 2D SiC also shows interesting Raman behavior, different from that of the bulk SiC. Our results suggest a strong correlation between the thickness of the nanosheets and the intensity of the longitudinal optical (LO) Raman mode. Furthermore, the created 2D SiC shows visible-light emission, indicating its potential applications for light-emitting devices and integrated microelectronics circuits. We anticipate that this work will cause disruptive impact across various technological fields, ranging from optoelectronics and spintronics to electronics and energy applications.

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