4.8 Article

Inkjet-defined site-selective (IDSS) growth for controllable production of in-plane and out-of-plane MoS2device arrays

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 12, Issue 32, Pages 16917-16927

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0nr04012f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [CMMI-1636132, ECCS-1708706, 1727918]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1727918] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Along with the increasing interest in MoS(2)as a promising electronic material, there is also an increasing demand for nanofabrication technologies that are compatible with this material and other relevant layered materials. In addition, the development of scalable nanofabrication approaches capable of directly producing MoS(2)device arrays is an imperative task to speed up the design and commercialize various functional MoS2-based devices. The desired fabrication methods need to meet two critical requirements. First, they should minimize the involvement of resist-based lithography and plasma etching processes, which introduce unremovable contaminations to MoS(2)structures. Second, they should be able to produce MoS(2)structures with in-plane or out-of-plane edges in a controlled way, which is key to increase the usability of MoS(2)for various device applications. Here, we introduce an inkjet-defined site-selective (IDSS) method that meets these requirements. IDSS includes two main steps: (i) inkjet printing of microscale liquid droplets that define the designated sites for MoS(2)growth, and (ii) site-selective growth of MoS(2)at droplet-defined sites. Moreover, IDSS is capable of generating MoS(2)with different structures. Specifically, an IDSS process using deionized (DI) water droplets mainly produces in-plane MoS(2)features, whereas the processes using graphene ink droplets mainly produce out-of-plane MoS(2)features rich in exposed edges. Using out-of-plane MoS(2)structures, we have demonstrated the fabrication of miniaturized on-chip lithium ion batteries, which exhibit reversible lithiation/delithiation capacity. This IDSS method could be further expanded as a scalable and reliable nanomanufacturing method for generating miniaturized on-chip energy storage devices.

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