Two-dimensional materials, such as transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), have the potential to revolutionize the field of electronics and photonics due to their unique physical and structural properties. This research presents a novel method for synthesizing crystalline TMDCs crystals with <10 nm size using ultrafast migration of vacancies at elevated temperatures. Through in situ and ex situ processing and using atomic-level characterization techniques, we analyzed the shape, size, crystallinity, composition, and strain distribution of these nanocrystals. These nanocrystals exhibit electronic structure signatures that differ from the 2D bulk: i.e., uniform mono- and multilayers. Further, our in situ, vacuum-based synthesis technique allows observation and comparison of defect and phase evolution in these crystals formed under van der Waals heterostructure confinement versus unconfined conditions. Overall, this research demonstrates a solid-state route to synthesizing uniform nanocrystals of TMDCs and lays the foundation for materials science in confined 2D spaces under extreme conditions.
Keywords: 2D Materials; 4D-STEM; Cathodoluminescence; EELS; Electron Microscopy; Scanning Probe microscopy; in situ.