"Traditionally, the thinner the material, the more sensitive it is to defects," said principal investigator Ali Javey, a professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences at Berkeley and a faculty scientist at Berkeley Lab. "This study presents the first demonstration of an optoelectronically perfect monolayer, which previously had been unheard of in a material this thin."
The researchers looked to superacids because they can lend protons, often in the form of hydrogen atoms, to other substances. This chemical reaction, called protonation, has the effect of filling in for the missing atoms at the site of defects, as well as removing unwanted contaminants stuck on the surface, the researchers said.
Processing with the superacid, called bistriflimide or TFSI, could also be useful in transistors manufacturing. As devices in computer chips get smaller and thinner, defects play a bigger role in limiting their performance.
"The defect-free monolayers developed here could solve this problem in addition to allowing for new types of low-energy switches," said Javey.
Funding for the research came from the U.S. Department of Energy, National Science Foundation, Center for Low Energy System Technology and Samsung. The findings were published in Science (doi: 10.1126/science.aad2114).