Heterojunction oxide thin-film transistors with unprecedented electron mobility grown from solution
Author(s) -
Hendrik Faber,
Satyajit Das,
YenHung Lin,
N. Pliatsikas,
Kui Zhao,
Th. Kehagias,
G. P. Dimitrakopulos,
Aram Amassian,
P. Patsalas,
Thomas D. Anthopoulos
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1602640
Subject(s) - heterojunction , transistor , materials science , optoelectronics , semiconductor , band offset , thin film transistor , electron mobility , oxide , nanotechnology , conduction band , electronics , electron , layer (electronics) , induced high electron mobility transistor , band gap , field effect transistor , electrical engineering , valence band , voltage , physics , quantum mechanics , metallurgy , engineering
Thin-film transistors made of solution-processed metal oxide semiconductors hold great promise for application in the emerging sector of large-area electronics. However, further advancement of the technology is hindered by limitations associated with the extrinsic electron transport properties of the often defect-prone oxides. We overcome this limitation by replacing the single-layer semiconductor channel with a low-dimensional, solution-grown In2O3/ZnO heterojunction. We find that In2O3/ZnO transistors exhibit band-like electron transport, with mobility values significantly higher than single-layer In2O3 and ZnO devices by a factor of 2 to 100. This marked improvement is shown to originate from the presence of free electrons confined on the plane of the atomically sharp heterointerface induced by the large conduction band offset between In2O3 and ZnO. Our finding underscores engineering of solution-grown metal oxide heterointerfaces as an alternative strategy to thin-film transistor development and has the potential for widespread technological applications
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