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A new metal transfer process for van der Waals contacts to vertical Schottky-junction transition metal dichalcogenide photovoltaics
Author(s) -
Cora M. Went,
Joeson Wong,
Phillip Jahelka,
Michael D. Kelzenberg,
Souvik Biswas,
Matthew S. Hunt,
Abigail Carbone,
Harry A. Atwater
Publication year - 2019
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.aax6061
Subject(s) - photovoltaics , van der waals force , materials science , schottky barrier , transition metal , metal , nanotechnology , optoelectronics , engineering physics , photovoltaic system , chemistry , metallurgy , electrical engineering , physics , engineering , organic chemistry , diode , molecule , biochemistry , catalysis
We develop a new technique for transferring metal contacts to create ultrathin solar cells from 2D materials. Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides are promising candidates for ultrathin optoelectronic devices due to their high absorption coefficients and intrinsically passivated surfaces. To maintain these near-perfect surfaces, recent research has focused on fabricating contacts that limit Fermi-level pinning at the metal-semiconductor interface. Here, we develop a new, simple procedure for transferring metal contacts that does not require aligned lithography. Using this technique, we fabricate vertical Schottky-junction WS2 solar cells, with Ag and Au as asymmetric work function contacts. Under laser illumination, we observe rectifying behavior and open-circuit voltage above 500 mV in devices with transferred contacts, in contrast to resistive behavior and open-circuit voltage below 15 mV in devices with evaporated contacts. One-sun measurements and device simulation results indicate that this metal transfer process could enable high specific power vertical Schottky-junction transition metal dichalcogenide photovoltaics, and we anticipate that this technique will lead to advances for two-dimensional devices more broadly.

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