Antimony oxide nanostructures in the monolayer limit: self-assembly of van der Waals-bonded molecular building blocks

Author:

Märkl TobiasORCID,Salehitaleghani Sara,Le Ster MaximeORCID,Kowalczyk Pawel JORCID,Wang Xiaoxiong,Wang Peng,Snyder Matthew,Bian Guang,Chiang Tai-Chang,Brown Simon AORCID

Abstract

Abstract Antimony oxide nanostructures have been identified as candidates for a range of electronic and optoelectronic applications. Here we demonstrate the growth of 2-dimensional antimony oxide nanostructures on various substrates, including highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), MoS2 and α-Bi(110) nanoislands. Using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) we show that the nanostructures formed are exclusively highly crystalline α-Sb2O3(111) monolayers with a lattice constant of 796 pm ± 7 pm. The nanostructures are triangular with lateral dimensions of up to ∼30 nm. Even though elemental antimony nanostructures are grown simultaneously mixed phases are not observed and both materials exhibit their own distinct growth modes. Moiré patterns are also observed and simulated, allowing confirmation of the atomic unit cell and an understanding of the orientation of the Sb2O3 structures with respect to the supporting materials. As in the bulk, the Sb2O3 nanostructures are formed from Sb4O6 molecules that are weakly interacting through van der Waals forces. This allows physical modification of the nanostructures with the STM tip. Scanning tunnelling spectroscopy reveals a wide band gap of at least 3.5 eV. Finally, we show that possible alternative structures that have unit cells comparable to those observed can be excluded based on our DFT calculations. The considered structures are a 2 × 2 reconstruction of β-Sb with one vacancy per unit cell and a van der Waals solid composed of Sb4 clusters. Previous reports have predominantly demonstrated Sb2O3 structures with much larger thicknesses.

Funder

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology

National Science Centre, Poland

Jiangsu Province Natural Science Foundation of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Marsden Fund

US National Science Foundation

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science,General Chemistry,Bioengineering

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