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Chitosan solid electrolyte as electric double layer in multilayer MoS 2 transistor for low‐voltage operation
Author(s) -
Jiang Jie,
Kuroda Marcelo A.,
Ahyi Ayayi C.,
IsaacsSmith Tamara,
Mirkhani Vahid,
Park Minseo,
Dhar Sarit
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
physica status solidi (a)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.532
H-Index - 104
eISSN - 1862-6319
pISSN - 1862-6300
DOI - 10.1002/pssa.201532284
Subject(s) - materials science , transistor , optoelectronics , contact resistance , ambipolar diffusion , schottky barrier , field effect transistor , electrolyte , schottky diode , electrode , threshold voltage , nanotechnology , conductance , semiconductor , chitosan , voltage , electrical engineering , layer (electronics) , electron , condensed matter physics , chemistry , diode , physics , quantum mechanics , engineering , biochemistry
Biocompatible solid electrolyte chitosan is introduced as a protonic/electronic electric double layer (EDL) dielectric in a multilayer MoS 2 transistor. This chitosan‐bioinspired transistor can operate at a low working voltage (<3 V) and exhibits an asymmetric ambipolar behavior. A high on/off ratio (∼10 4 ) was achieved for both electrons and holes, in conjunction with a very steep subthreshold swing (67 mV/dec) which is close to the theoretical limit of an ideal field‐effect transistor (60 mV/dec). It was established that the on‐state conductance of these devices is strongly limited by the contact resistance of the metal–MoS 2 junctions, and the conductance can be increased by a factor of ∼3 by using dual‐gate electrostatic modulation. Further exploiting the double‐gate geometry allows us to characterize the contact resistance in the on‐regime. We make a numerical simulation and observe important contributions that are independently modulated by back and top gates stemming from Schottky barriers formed at the MoS 2 /metal interface and the chitosan‐induced charge accumulation near the electrode, respectively. Such EDL multilayer MoS 2 transistors with bioinspired chitosan solid electrolyte can provide a new opportunity for the fabrication of low voltage and cost‐effective two‐dimensional semiconductor devices which are also biocompatible and environment friendly.

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