Stress-dominated growth of two-dimensional materials on nonplanar substrates
2021
Abstract Curved features are ubiquitous on solid surfaces, but the effect of surface curvatures on growth of two-dimensional (2D) materials has not yet been established. Using a newly developed method based on the Metropolis algorithm and taking graphene as a prototype, we find that a curved feature on substrates can result in a variety of topological defects in 2D materials. As the feature's size increases by just nanometers, the defects can vary from adatoms, dislocation pairs, and grain boundary scars to long-range grain boundaries, in contrast to previously reported defect-free modes of rigid colloidal crystals growing on spheres. We identify an important role of curvature-induced lattice stress in lowering the growth rate over the curved features and driving a plastic instability in the materials. When the feature's size increases to several nanometers, the stress effect is compromised by an enhanced effect of geodesic curvature, yielding long-range grain boundaries as a result of increased local growth rate on the feature with respect to that on flat regions. We further provide a ‘phase diagram’ of defects that helps to guide a rational choice of geometrical parameters of features towards the growth of high-quality 2D materials as well as controllable creation of topological defects.
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