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Creators/Authors contains: "Bartels, Ludwig"

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  1. One-dimensional (1D) van der Waals (vdW) materials display electronic and magnetic transport properties that make them uniquely suited as interconnect materials and for low-dimensional optoelectronic applications. However, there are only around 700 1D vdW structures in general materials databases, making database curation approaches ineffective for 1D discovery. Here, we utilize machine-learning techniques to discover 1D vdW compositions that have not yet been synthesized. Our techniques go beyond discovery efforts involving elemental substitutions and instead start with a composition space of 4741 binary and 392,342 ternary formulas. We predict up to 3000 binary and 10,000 ternary 1D compounds and further classify them by expected magnetic and electronic properties. Our model identifies MoI3, a material we experimentally confirm to exist with wire-like subcomponents and exotic magnetic properties. More broadly, we find several chalcogen-, halogen-, and pnictogen-containing compounds expected to be synthesizable using chemical vapor deposition and chemical vapor transport. 
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  2. We conducted a tip-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy (TERS) and photoluminescence (PL) study of quasi-1D TaSe 3− δ nanoribbons exfoliated onto gold substrates. At a selenium deficiency of δ ∼ 0.25 (Se/Ta = 2.75), the nanoribbons exhibit a strong, broad PL peak centered around ∼920 nm (1.35 eV), suggesting their semiconducting behavior. Such nanoribbons revealed a strong TERS response under 785 nm (1.58 eV) laser excitation, allowing for their nanoscale spectroscopic imaging. Nanoribbons with a smaller selenium deficiency (Se/Ta = 2.85, δ ∼ 0.15) did not show any PL or TERS response. The confocal Raman spectra of these samples agree with the previously-reported spectra of metallic TaSe 3 . The differences in the optical response of the nanoribbons examined in this study suggest that even small variations in Se content can induce changes in electronic band structure, causing samples to exhibit either metallic or semiconducting character. The temperature-dependent electrical measurements of devices fabricated with both types of materials corroborate these observations. The density-functional-theory calculations revealed that substitution of an oxygen atom in a Se vacancy can result in band gap opening and thus enable the transition from a metal to a semiconductor. However, the predicted band gap is substantially smaller than that derived from the PL data. These results indicate that the properties of van der Waals materials can vary significantly depending on stoichiometry, defect types and concentration, and possibly environmental and substrate effects. In view of this finding, local probing of nanoribbon properties with TERS becomes essential to understanding such low-dimensional systems. 
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  3. We report the polarization-dependent Raman spectra of exfoliated MoI3, a van der Waals material with a “true one-dimensional” crystal structure that can be exfoliated to individual atomic chains. The temperature evolution of several Raman features reveals an anomalous behavior suggesting a phase transition of magnetic origin. Theoretical considerations indicate that MoI3 is an easy-plane antiferromagnet with alternating spins along the dimerized chains and with inter-chain helical spin ordering. The calculated frequencies of phonons and magnons are consistent with the interpretation of the experimental Raman data. The obtained results shed light on the specifics of the phononic and magnonic states in MoI3 and provide a strong motivation for further study of this unique material with potential for future spintronic applications. 
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