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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

Creating Heptanary Monolayer Medium-Entropy Alloys through Chemical Vapor Deposition for Advanced Infrared Photodetectors

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 29, 2026
in Chemistry
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The relentless pursuit of advanced materials for next-generation optoelectronic devices has recently found a remarkable breakthrough, as a pioneering research team from Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT) has successfully synthesized a novel 1T’ monolayer heptanary medium-entropy (ME) alloy. This groundbreaking achievement opens new horizons for high-performance infrared photodetectors, promising superior sensitivity and responsivity critical for technological progress in both civilian and defense applications.

Spearheaded by Professor Jiadong Zhou, the research underscores the synthesis of an unprecedented seven-component alloy comprising molybdenum, tungsten, iron, cobalt, sulfur, selenium, and tellurium—embedded in a well-defined 1T’ phase structure. This medium-entropy alloy was fabricated via a single-step chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process, a technique known for its scalability and precise control over atomic composition at the monolayer level. The team’s innovative approach leverages entropy engineering within two-dimensional materials to tailor electrical and optoelectronic properties systematically.

The intricacies of the synthesis lie in the meticulous modulation of seven elemental precursors to achieve a stable, monolayered 1T’ lattice configuration. Medium-entropy alloys, distinct from their high-entropy counterparts, harness a balanced compositional complexity that mitigates lattice distortion while optimizing carrier dynamics. This precise configurational entropy facilitates enhanced charge transport and widened spectral responsiveness crucial for infrared detection. The challenge resolved by the BIT group was to maintain the alloy’s structural integrity while revealing emergent properties unattainable in pristine single-component transition metal dichalcogenides.

Published in the esteemed journal Nano Research on March 26, 2025, the study presents a comprehensive analysis of the electrical and optoelectronic performance metrics of these ME alloys. The alloy exhibited marked improvements in parameters such as conductance, Schottky barrier height at gold contacts, and thermal activation energy. These enhancements translate directly into photodetector devices that demonstrate elevated photocurrent responsivities, with reported values reaching 27.92 A/W at 1064 nm wavelength and an exceptional 63.74 A/W when illuminated at 1550 nm—benchmarking markedly higher than conventional 1T’ MoTe2-based devices.

Infrared photodetection technology fundamentally relies on material systems capable of highly efficient photon absorption combined with swift charge carrier generation and transport. Pristine 1T’ MoTe2 has historically been a favored candidate due to its narrow bandgap facilitating near-infrared absorption. However, its limitations in ambient stability and charge carrier recombination rates capped device performance. The incorporation of medium entropy through tailored substitutional alloying elements results in structural defect passivation, elevated density of states near the Fermi level, and reduced non-radiative recombination pathways—accounting for the observed amplification in device responsivity and stability under continuous operation conditions.

The single-step CVD approach, as demonstrated, provides a promising scalable route for industrial applications, enabling atomic-level control necessary for custom-designing alloy compositions and phase structures. This versatility offers the possibility of tuning the optoelectronic landscape based not only on elemental variety but also on layer thickness and strain engineering. Moreover, the success of this synthesis strategy could stimulate an entire new family of medium-entropy 2D materials, thereby broadening material libraries for photonic and electronic device innovation.

A crucial technical insight from Professor Zhou’s group lies in their detailed investigation of the Schottky barrier formed between the ME alloy and gold electrodes, a fundamental parameter dictating charge injection barriers and thus device efficiency. The alloy’s tunable electronic band structure created by elemental complexity leads to a reduction in the Schottky barrier height, facilitating enhanced electron flow and thereby improving the overall photodetector responsiveness. Additionally, the measured thermal activation energy suggests that charge carriers can overcome potential traps more readily, enhancing photoconductive gain under infrared illumination.

The multi-institutional collaboration featuring experts from the Centre for Quantum Physics and the Key Laboratory of Advanced Optoelectronic Quantum Architecture and Measurement at BIT, alongside specialists from the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, underscores the interdisciplinary nature of this innovation. Such a collaborative framework fused expertise in materials synthesis, electronic characterization, and quantum simulations to unravel the alloy’s unique physicochemical behavior.

Importantly, this advancement not only has profound implications for infrared imaging and sensing applications but also catalyzes research into entropy-driven design principles for two-dimensional alloys. By harnessing configurational entropy as a tunable thermodynamic parameter, material scientists can now contemplate creating functional materials with targeted bandgaps, defect densities, and carrier mobilities—vital for the future of high-efficiency photodetection, flexible electronics, and quantum devices.

The research was rigorously supported by multiple prestigious funding sources, including the National Key R&D Program of China and the National Natural Science Foundation of China, ensuring sufficient resources for in-depth exploration of entropy engineering in advanced materials. Access to state-of-the-art electron microscopy facilities further permitted atomic-level structural elucidation, confirming the uniform dispersion of the seven elements within the 1T’ monolayer lattice and correlating microstructural features with enhanced macroscopic device performance.

Looking ahead, this work lays a formidable foundation for the development of next-generation photodetectors that can operate efficiently in the infrared regime, critical for telecommunications, night vision, environmental monitoring, and medical diagnostics. The synergy of medium-entropy alloy design, two-dimensional material physics, and scalable CVD synthesis marks a paradigm shift, offering a material platform where unprecedented optoelectronic characteristics can be engineered from the atomic scale upward.

The debut of the heptanary 1T’ monolayer ME alloy heralds exciting opportunities for the broader scientific community in pushing the envelope of material complexity to unlock extraordinary device functionalities. With continuous improvements and potential integration into heterostructure architectures, these innovative alloys are poised to transcend traditional material limitations, revolutionizing the infrared photodetector landscape and enabling the realization of highly sensitive, robust, and miniaturized photonic systems that meet ever-increasing technological demands.

Subject of Research: Development and synthesis of 1T’ monolayer heptanary medium-entropy alloy for enhanced infrared photodetection.

Article Title: Synthesis of Heptanary Monolayer Medium-Entropy Alloy via Chemical Vapor Deposition for High-performance Infrared Photodetectors.

News Publication Date: March 26, 2026.

Web References:
https://doi.org/10.26599/NR.2025.94908184

References:
Published article in Nano Research, 2025.

Keywords:
Infrared photodetectors, medium-entropy alloy, 1T’ monolayer, chemical vapor deposition, two-dimensional materials, optoelectronic devices, configurational entropy, MoTe2, transition metal dichalcogenides, photoconductivity, Schottky barrier, nanoscale synthesis.

Tags: advanced infrared sensor technologycarrier dynamics in medium-entropy materialschemical vapor deposition synthesiscompositional complexity in alloyselectrical properties of 2D alloysentropy engineering in optoelectronicsheptanary medium-entropy alloysinfrared photodetector materialsmonolayer 1T’ phase materialsmulti-element alloy fabricationscalable monolayer alloy productiontwo-dimensional medium-entropy alloys

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