Author: Zhang, Heng; Yimam, Daniel T.; de Graaf, Sytze; Momand, Jamo; Vermeulen, Paul A.; Wei, Yingfen; Noheda, Beatriz; Kooi, Bart J.
Title: Strain Relaxation in “2D/2D and 2D/3D Systemsâ€: Highly Textured Mica/Bi(2)Te(3), Sb(2)Te(3)/Bi(2)Te(3), and Bi(2)Te(3)/GeTe Heterostructures Cord-id: fw95da4j Document date: 2021_1_21
ID: fw95da4j
Snippet: [Image: see text] Strain engineering as a method to control functional properties has seen in the last decades a surge of interest. Heterostructures comprising 2D-materials and containing van der Waals(-like) gaps were considered unsuitable for strain engineering. However, recent work on heterostructures based on Bi(2)Te(3), Sb(2)Te(3), and GeTe showed the potential of a different type of strain engineering due to long-range mutual straining. Still, a comprehensive understanding of the strain re
Document: [Image: see text] Strain engineering as a method to control functional properties has seen in the last decades a surge of interest. Heterostructures comprising 2D-materials and containing van der Waals(-like) gaps were considered unsuitable for strain engineering. However, recent work on heterostructures based on Bi(2)Te(3), Sb(2)Te(3), and GeTe showed the potential of a different type of strain engineering due to long-range mutual straining. Still, a comprehensive understanding of the strain relaxation mechanism in these telluride heterostructures is lacking due to limitations of the earlier analyses performed. Here, we present a detailed study of strain in two-dimensional (2D/2D) and mixed dimensional (2D/3D) systems derived from mica/Bi(2)Te(3), Sb(2)Te(3)/Bi(2)Te(3), and Bi(2)Te(3)/GeTe heterostructures, respectively. We first clearly show the fast relaxation process in the mica/Bi(2)Te(3) system where the strain was generally transferred and confined up to the second or third van der Waals block and then abruptly relaxed. Then we show, using three independent techniques, that the long-range exponentially decaying strain in GeTe and Sb(2)Te(3) grown on the relaxed Bi(2)Te(3) and Bi(2)Te(3) on relaxed Sb(2)Te(3) as directly observed at the growth surface is still present within these three different top layers a long time after growth. The observed behavior points at immediate strain relaxation by plastic deformation without any later relaxation and rules out an elastic (energy minimization) model as was proposed recently. Our work advances the understanding of strain tuning in textured heterostructures or superlattices governed by anisotropic bonding.
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