Interface-Protected Subsurface Vacancies for Room-Temperature Sub-ppm SO2 and NO2 Detection in MoS2, MoSe2, and MoTe2 via Electron Irradiation
Abstract
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are promising candidates for room-temperature gas sensing, but limited intrinsic adsorption hampers trace-level detection. Here, we introduce a scalable defect-engineering route that creates subsurface chalcogen vacancies-selectively generated in the bottom chalcogen layer by tunable electron irradiation-yielding chemically clean, stable, and interface-protected active sites. Density functional theory (DFT) and statistical thermodynamics calculations reveal adsorption, charge transfer, and carrier modulation in MoS2, MoSe2, and MoTe2 for key air pollutants over 0.01-1000 ppm at 300 K. The impact of these buried vacancies is found to be highly material-and analytedependent: for N2, O2 , CH4, NH3, H2S, and CO2, vacancy effects are negligible across all substrates, whereas for SO2 and NO2 the enhancements are substantial and strongly TMD-specific. At only 2% vacancy density, MoS2 and MoSe2 exhibit modest (<15%) carrier modulation gains, while MoTe2 shows exceptional improvements-exceeding 50% for SO2 and reaching up to 350% for NO2 in the sub-ppm regime-driven by markedly increased adsorption coverage at defect sites. These results position subsurface vacancy engineering as a targeted and scalable route to selective, high-sensitivity TMD gas sensors, identifying MoTe2 as a particularly compelling platform for ultra-trace detection.
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