Abstract
Shrinking the size of a bulk metal into nanoscale leads to the discreteness of electronic energy levels, the so-called Kubo gap δ. Renormalization of the electronic properties with a tunable and size-dependent δ renders fascinating photon emission and electron tunneling. In contrast with usual three-dimensional (3D) metal clusters, here we demonstrate that Kubo gap δ can be achieved with a two-dimensional (2D) metallic transition metal dichalcogenide (i.e., 1T′-phase MoTe2) nanocluster embedded in a semiconducting polymorph (i.e., 1H-phase MoTe2). Such a 1T′/1H MoTe2 nanodomain resembles a 3D metallic droplet squeezed in a 2D space which shows a strong polarization catastrophe while simultaneously maintaining its bond integrity, which is absent in traditional δ-gapped 3D clusters. The weak screening of the host 2D MoTe2 leads to photon emission of such pseudometallic systems and a ballistic injection of carriers in the 1T′/1H/1T′ homojunctions which may find applications in sensors and 2D reconfigurable devices.
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Yuan, J., Chen, Y., Xie, Y., Zhang, X., Rao, D., Guo, Y., … Cai, Y. (2020). Squeezed metallic droplet with tunable Kubo gap and charge injection in transition metal dichalcogenides. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(12), 6362–6369. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1920036117
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