Hole- and electron-injection driven phase transitions in transition metal dichalcogenides and beyond: A unified understanding
Xiao-Huan Lv, Meng-Qi Wu, Yin-Ti Ren, Rui-Ning Wang, Hu Zhang,, Chen-Dong Jin, Ru-Qian Lian, Peng-Lai Gong, Xing-Qiang Shi, and Jiang-Long, Wang

TL;DR
This study uses density-functional theory to analyze how hole- and electron-injection induce phase transitions in 2D transition metal dichalcogenides, revealing a unified understanding and new pathways to stabilize metallic phases.
Contribution
It demonstrates that hole-injection more efficiently drives phase transitions to the metallic T-phase than electron-injection, providing a unified framework for understanding phase control in 2D materials.
Findings
Hole-injection more effectively induces T-phase transition than electron-injection.
Work function analysis distinguishes T and dT phases quantitatively.
Hole-doping with yttrium explains recent WS2 phase transition experiments.
Abstract
The phase transitions among polymorphic two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have attracted increasing attention for their potential in enabling distinct functionalities in the same material for making integrated devices. Electron-injection to TMDs has been proved to be a feasible way to drive structural phase transition from the semiconducting H-phase to the semimetal dT-phase. In this contribution, based on density-functional theory (DFT) calculations, firstly we demonstrate that hole-injection drives the transition of the H-phase more efficiently to the metallic T-phase than to the semimetallic dT-phase for group VI-B TMDs (MoS2, WS2, and MoSe2, etc.). The origin can be attributed to the smaller work function of the T-phase than that of the dT-phase. Our work function analysis can distinguish the T and dT phases quantitatively while it is challenging for the…
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Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Graphene research and applications · Organic and Molecular Conductors Research
