2014
DOI: 10.1021/nn503893j
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Extraordinary Photoluminescence and Strong Temperature/Angle-Dependent Raman Responses in Few-Layer Phosphorene

Abstract: Phosphorene is a new family member of two-dimensional materials. We observed strong and highly layer-dependent photoluminescence in few-layer phosphorene (two to five layers). The results confirmed the theoretical prediction that few-layer phosphorene has a direct and layer-sensitive band gap. We also demonstrated that few-layer phosphorene is more sensitive to temperature modulation than graphene and MoS2 in Raman scattering. The anisotropic Raman response in few-layer phosphorene has enabled us to use an opt… Show more

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Cited by 625 publications
(697 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…Phosphorene is a recently developed two-dimensional (2D) material that has attracted tremendous attention owing to its unique anisotropic manner [1][2][3][4][5][6] , layer-dependent direct band gaps 7,8 , and quasi-onedimensional (1D) excitonic nature 9,10 , which are all in drastic contrast with the properties of other 2D materials, such as graphene 11 and transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors [12][13][14] . Monolayer phosphorene has been of particular interest in exploring technological applications and investigating fundamental phenomena, such as 2D quantum confinement and many-body interactions 9,15 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Phosphorene is a recently developed two-dimensional (2D) material that has attracted tremendous attention owing to its unique anisotropic manner [1][2][3][4][5][6] , layer-dependent direct band gaps 7,8 , and quasi-onedimensional (1D) excitonic nature 9,10 , which are all in drastic contrast with the properties of other 2D materials, such as graphene 11 and transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors [12][13][14] . Monolayer phosphorene has been of particular interest in exploring technological applications and investigating fundamental phenomena, such as 2D quantum confinement and many-body interactions 9,15 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Monolayer phosphorene has been of particular interest in exploring technological applications and investigating fundamental phenomena, such as 2D quantum confinement and many-body interactions 9,15 . However, such unique 2D materials are unstable in ambient conditions and degrade quickly 8,16 . Particularly, monolayer phosphorene is expected to be much less stable than few-layer phosphorene 16 , hence making its identification and characterization extremely challenging.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One recent contender in the family that has been receiving significant attention is phosphorene -a single layer of black phosphorus (hereafter referred to as black phosphorene) with an armchair-like puckered lattice structure. [10][11][12] Unlike graphene as a zero-gap semimetal, black phosphorene has a nearly direct bandgap of ~1.5 eV, 12,13 and compared with MoS2 it enjoys a much improved carrier mobility. [10][11][12] Phosphorous is known to be stable in a large family of structures.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[5][6][7][8][9] Since the first isolation of black phosphorus and demonstration of a field effect device, numerous reports investigating the synthesis and optoelectronic properties of this material have emerged, appropriately summarized in recent reviews. 5,6,[10][11][12] Likewise a number of reports have also appeared on the applications of black phosphorus in fast photodetectors 13 , polarization sensitive detectors, 14 waveguide integrated devices 15 , multispectral photodetectors 16 , visible to near-infrared absorbers 17 and emitters, [18][19][20][21] heterojunction 22 and split gate p-n homojunction photovoltaics 23 , gatetunable van der Waals heterojunctions for digital logic circuits 24,25 and gigahertz frequency transistors in analog electronics 26 . A majority of the studies on both the fundamental optical properties of black phosphorus and applications in optoelectronic devices have explored only the visible frequency range [27][28][29][30] .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%