Issue 9, 2023

Tilt grain boundaries in WS2 from low to high misorientation angles

Abstract

Grain boundaries (GBs) with low misorientation angles are interfacing lines connecting sparsely distributed dislocation cores, but high-angle GBs could have amorphous atomic arrangements with merged dislocations. Tilt GBs in two-dimensional materials frequently emerge in large-scale specimen production. In graphene, a critical value for differentiating low and high angles is quite big because of its flexibility. However, understanding transition-metal-dichalcogenide GBs meets additional complexities regarding the three-atom thickness and the rigid polar bonds. We construct a series of energetic favorable WS2 GB models using coincident-site-lattice theory with periodic-boundary conditions. The atomistic structures of four low-energy dislocation cores are identified, consistent with the experiments. Our first-principles simulations reveal an intermediate critical angle of θc ≈ 14° for WS2 GBs. Structural deformations are effectively dissipated via W–S bond distortions especially along the out-of-plane direction, instead of the prominent mesoscale buckling in one-atom-thick graphene. The presented results are informative in studies of the mechanical properties of transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers.

Graphical abstract: Tilt grain boundaries in WS2 from low to high misorientation angles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Oct 2022
Accepted
10 Apr 2023
First published
17 Apr 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale Adv., 2023,5, 2657-2663

Tilt grain boundaries in WS2 from low to high misorientation angles

D. Ke, J. Hong and Y. Zhang, Nanoscale Adv., 2023, 5, 2657 DOI: 10.1039/D2NA00709F

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