Identifying atomically thin crystals with diffusively reflected light
D. Domaretskiy, N. Ubrig, I. Guti\'errez-Lezama, M.K. Tran, and A.F., Morpurgo

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel optical detection method using diffusively reflected light on inhomogeneous substrates to identify atomically thin 2D materials, offering higher sensitivity and broader substrate compatibility than traditional contrast techniques.
Contribution
The authors demonstrate that diffusively reflected light significantly enhances contrast for detecting atomically thin layers, validated through experiments on multiple 2D materials including WSe₂, phosphorene, InSe, and graphene.
Findings
Enhanced contrast enables detection on various substrates.
Validated with over 60 WSe₂ samples of different thicknesses.
Applicable to multiple 2D materials beyond graphene.
Abstract
The field of two-dimensional materials has been developing at an impressive pace, with atomically thin crystals of an increasing number of different compounds that have become available, together with techniques enabling their assembly into functional heterostructures. The strategy to detect these atomically thin crystals has however remained unchanged since the discovery of graphene. Such an absence of evolution is starting to pose problems because for many of the 2D materials of current interest the optical contrast provided by the commonly used detection procedure is insufficient to identify the presence of individual monolayers or to determine unambiguously the thickness of atomically thin multilayers. Here we explore an alternative detection strategy, in which the enhancement of optical contrast originates from the use of optically inhomogeneous substrates, leading to diffusively…
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