A Kansas State University chemical engineer has discovered that a new member of the ultrathin materials family has great potential to improve electronic and thermal devices.
Vikas Berry, William H. Honstead professor of chemical engineering, and his research team have studied a new three-atom-thick material—molybdenum disulfide—and found that manipulating it with gold atoms improves its electrical characteristics. Their research appears in a recent issue of Nano Letters.
The research may advance transistors, photodetectors, sensors and thermally conductive coatings, Berry said. It could also produce ultrafast, ultrathin logic and plasmonics devices.