- Lu, Ang-Yu;
- Zhu, Hanyu;
- Xiao, Jun;
- Chuu, Chih-Piao;
- Han, Yimo;
- Chiu, Ming-Hui;
- Cheng, Chia-Chin;
- Yang, Chih-Wen;
- Wei, Kung-Hwa;
- Yang, Yiming;
- Wang, Yuan;
- Sokaras, Dimosthenis;
- Nordlund, Dennis;
- Yang, Peidong;
- Muller, David A;
- Chou, Mei-Yin;
- Zhang, Xiang;
- Li, Lain-Jong
Structural symmetry-breaking plays a crucial role in determining the electronic band structures of two-dimensional materials. Tremendous efforts have been devoted to breaking the in-plane symmetry of graphene with electric fields on AB-stacked bilayers or stacked van der Waals heterostructures. In contrast, transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers are semiconductors with intrinsic in-plane asymmetry, leading to direct electronic bandgaps, distinctive optical properties and great potential in optoelectronics. Apart from their in-plane inversion asymmetry, an additional degree of freedom allowing spin manipulation can be induced by breaking the out-of-plane mirror symmetry with external electric fields or, as theoretically proposed, with an asymmetric out-of-plane structural configuration. Here, we report a synthetic strategy to grow Janus monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides breaking the out-of-plane structural symmetry. In particular, based on a MoS2 monolayer, we fully replace the top-layer S with Se atoms. We confirm the Janus structure of MoSSe directly by means of scanning transmission electron microscopy and energy-dependent X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and prove the existence of vertical dipoles by second harmonic generation and piezoresponse force microscopy measurements.