METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING TWO-DIMENSIONAL MATERIAL
20210332469 ยท 2021-10-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
C23C14/0047
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C14/46
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C23C14/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method for manufacturing a two-dimensional material is described. In this method, an energy beam sputtering process is performed by using a target to form a transition metal film on a substrate. When the energy beam sputtering process is performed, a potential difference between the target and the substrate is 0, such that no electric field is generated between the target and the substrate. A synthesis reaction is performed on the transition metal film within a tube furnace to synthesize a two-dimensional material layer from the transition metal film and chalcogen.
Claims
1. A method for manufacturing a two-dimensional material, comprising: performing an energy beam sputtering process to form a transition metal film on a substrate by using a target, wherein when the energy beam sputtering process is performed, a potential difference between the target and the substrate is 0, such that no electric field is generated between the target and the substrate; and performing a synthesis reaction on the transition metal film within a tube furnace to synthesize a two-dimensional material layer from the transition metal film and chalcogen.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein performing the energy beam sputtering process comprises using an energy beam, and the energy beam is an atomic beam, an ion beam, or a light beam.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the target and the substrate are opposite to each other, and performing the energy beam sputtering process comprises projecting an energy beam toward the target.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein a thickness of the transition metal film is ranging from 0.1 nm to 2 nm.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the target and the substrate are not in electrical connection.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein performing the synthesis reaction comprises controlling a temperature within the tube furnace at a range from 700 degrees centigrade to 1000 degrees centigrade.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the two-dimensional material layer comprises one atomic layer to ten atomic layers.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the two-dimensional material layer is a transition metal dichalcogenide layer.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the transition metal film comprises Mo, W, Ta, Pt, V, or Nb.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the chalcogen comprises S, Se, or Te.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] The invention can be more fully understood by reading the following detailed description of the embodiment, with reference made to the accompanying drawings as follows:
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] The inventor discovered that because a very large direct current or alternating current electric field exists between a target and a substrate during a magnetron sputtering deposition process, the substrate is bombarded by plasma or even is re-sputtered due to the electric field. For a thick material having dozens of atomic layers, a ratio of a surface to a volume of the thick material is small, such that the situation does not bring about a process problem. However, the two-dimensional material is thin, and plasma bombarding or re-sputtering breaks the two-dimensional material so as to seriously damage flatness and uniformity of the two-dimensional material. In addition, the conventional technique for manufacturing a two-dimensional material cannot form a large-area and good-quality two-dimensional material. In view of the aforementioned reasons, embodiments of the present disclosure provide a method for manufacturing a two-dimensional material, which can manufacture a large-area and high-quality two-dimensional crystal material, particularly a transition metal dichalcogenide series material, thereby greatly expanding application of the two-dimensional material.
[0026] Referring to
[0027] An energy beam 120 may be projected toward the surface 102 of the target 100, such that energy of the energy beam 120 is used to excite the target 100, so as to knock out target atoms 104, and thus the target atoms 104 are deposited on the surface 112 of the substrate 110. Therefore, the energy beam 120 has energy which is sufficient to knock out the target atoms 104. An apparatus generating the energy beam 120 may be adjacent to the target 100 and the substrate 110, or may be far away the target 100 at a distance. The apparatus generating the energy beam 120 may be disposed at which the energy beam 120 generated by the apparatus can be projected onto the surface 102 of the target 100. In some examples, the energy beam 120 may be an atomic beam, an ion beam, or a light beam. The light beam may be, for example, a laser light beam.
[0028] As shown in
[0029] In the present embodiment, when the energy beam sputtering process is performed, no electric field is generated between the target 100 and the substrate 110, i.e. a potential difference between the target 100 and the substrate 110 is 0. In some exemplary examples, the target 100 and the substrate 110 are not in electrical connection, i.e. the target 100 and the substrate 110 are not connected to any power supply. In certain examples, the target 100 and the substrate 110 may be in electrical connection, but a potential difference between the target 100 and the substrate 110 is 0.
[0030] No electric field is generated between the target 100 and the substrate 110 in the energy beam sputtering process, such that the target atoms 104 knocked out from the target 100 by the energy beam 120 can softly land on the surface 112 of the substrate 110 without bombarding the surface 112 of the substrate 110. Thus, the transition metal film 130 deposited on the surface 112 of the substrate 110 is kept in good flatness and uniformity.
[0031] After the energy beam sputtering process is completed, a step 210 may be performed to perform a synthesis reaction on the transition metal film 130 on the substrate 110, so as to synthesize a two-dimensional material layer 140 from the transition metal film 130 and chalcogen, as shown in
[0032] In the present embodiment, because the two-dimensional material layer 140 is synthesized from the transition metal and the chalcogen, the two-dimensional material layer 140 is a transition metal dichalcogenide layer. For example, a material of the two-dimensional material layer 140 may be a material having a chemical formula MX.sub.2, in which M in the chemical formula may be a transition metal element, such as Mo, W, Ta, Pt, V, or Nb, and X in the chemical formula may be a chalcogen element, such as S, Se, or Te. In addition, according to application requirements, the two-dimensional material layer 140 may include one atomic layer to ten atomic layers.
[0033] Before the synthesis reaction is performed, the transition metal film 130 on the substrate 110 has good flatness and uniformity, such that the two-dimensional material layer 140 formed by synthesizing the transition metal film 130 and the chalcogen also has good flatness and uniformity, and the two-dimensional material layer 140 further has good-quality crystals. In addition, because the flatness and the uniformity of the transition metal film 130 are good, a large-area two-dimensional material layer 140 can be successfully manufactured. For example, an area of the two-dimensional material layer 140 may be equal to or more than two-inch wafer. Furthermore, the energy beam sputtering process of the present embodiment can be integrated with other industry processes, and thus can be applied to mass production.
[0034] In one exemplary example, a molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material is manufactured for example. In this example, an energy beam sputtering process is firstly performed to project a molybdenum target by using an energy beam to eject molybdenum atoms, such that a large-area, flat, and uniform molybdenum film is formed on a surface of a substrate. Then, the substrate and the molybdenum film formed thereon, and sulphur powder are put into a tube furnace, in which a temperature within the tube furnace is controlled at a range from about 800 degrees centigrade to about 950 degrees centigrade. The molybdenum film and the sulphur powder are vulcanized within the tube furnace for about 20 minutes to about 60 minutes, and then a large-area, flat, uniform, and high-quality molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material is obtained. The molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material may include one to ten atomic layers.
[0035] The molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material has a large area, such that it is convenient for analysis and detection. Some analyses and detection of the molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material are made below. An angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) of the molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material shows that the molybdenum disulfide two-dimensional material has a quality property similar to a single crystal bulk. Such a quality cannot be achieved by using a chemical vapor deposition technique or a magnetron sputtering technique.
[0036] Referring to
[0037] Referring
[0038] According to the aforementioned embodiments, one advantage of the present invention is that when a two-dimensional material is manufactured by using embodiments of the present invention, there is no electric field generated between a target and a substrate, such that transition metal atoms brought down from the target by the energy beam do not bombard the substrate, thereby keeping the two-dimensional material on the substrate integrated, flat, and uniform.
[0039] According to the aforementioned embodiments, another advantage of the present invention is that a method for manufacturing a two-dimensional material of embodiments of the present invention can grow a large-area two-dimensional material having good-quality crystals, such that the two-dimensional material is easily analyzed and detected, and may be applied to manufacture a large-area device.
[0040] Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain embodiments thereof, the foregoing embodiments of the present invention are illustrative of the present invention rather than limiting of the present invention. It will be apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the embodiments contained herein.