ISM 2022 (Microscopy)

ASYMMETRIC "MISFIT" NANOTUBES: CHEMICAL AFFINITY OUTWITS THE ENTROPY AT HIGH-TEMPERATURE SOLID STATE REACTIONS

Sreedhara M B 1 Simon Hettler 2 Ifat Kaplan-Ashiri 3 Katya Rechav 3 Yishay Feldman 3 Andrey Enyashin 4 Lothar Houben 3 Raul Arenal 2 Reshef Tenne 1
1Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
2Laboratorio de Microscopias avanzadas, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
3Department of Chemical Research Support, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
4UB RAS, Institute of Solid State Chemistry, Ekaterinburg, Russia

Abstract

Asymmetric 2D structures (often named Janus), like SeMoS, and their nanotubes have tremendous scope in material chemistry, nanophotonics and nanoelectronics due to a lack of inversion symmetry and time-reversal symmetry. The synthesis of these structures is fundamentally difficult owing to the entropy-driven randomized distribution of chalcogens. Indeed no Janus nanotubes were experimentally prepared, so far. Serendipitously, a family of asymmetric misfit layer superstructures (tubes and flakes), including LaX-TaX2 (where X= S/Se) were synthesized by high-temperature chemical vapor transport reaction where the Se binds exclusively to the Ta atoms and La binds to S atoms, rather than the anticipated random distribution. With increasing Se concentration, the LaS-TaX2 misfit structure gradually transformed into a new LaS-TaSe2-TaSe2 superstructure. No misfit structures were found for xSe=1. These counterintuitive results shed new light on the chemical selectivity and stability of misfit compounds and 2D-alloys, in general. The lack of inversion symmetry in these asymmetric compounds induces very large local electrical dipoles. The loss of inversion and time-reversal symmetries in the chiral nanotubes offers intriguing physical observations and applications.

Reference

Sreedhara et al., Asymmetric misfit nanotubes: Chemical affinity outwits the entropy at high-temperature solid-state reactions. PNAS 2021, 118, (35), e2109945118