Field-Effect Transistors Built from All Two-Dimensional Material Components
Author(s) -
Tania Roy,
Mahmut Tosun,
Jeong Seuk Kang,
Angada B. Sachid,
Sujay B. Desai,
Mark Hettick,
Chenming Hu,
Ali Javey
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/nn501723y
Subject(s) - materials science , optoelectronics , transistor , electron mobility , field effect transistor , graphene , semiconductor , diode , dielectric , rectification , gate dielectric , van der waals force , nanotechnology , voltage , electrical engineering , chemistry , organic chemistry , molecule , engineering
We demonstrate field-effect transistors using heterogeneously stacked two-dimensional materials for all of the components, including the semiconductor, insulator, and metal layers. Specifically, MoS2 is used as the active channel material, hexagonal-BN as the top-gate dielectric, and graphene as the source/drain and the top-gate contacts. This transistor exhibits n-type behavior with an ON/OFF current ratio of >10(6), and an electron mobility of ∼33 cm(2)/V·s. Uniquely, the mobility does not degrade at high gate voltages, presenting an important advantage over conventional Si transistors where enhanced surface roughness scattering severely reduces carrier mobilities at high gate-fields. A WSe2-MoS2 diode with graphene contacts is also demonstrated. The diode exhibits excellent rectification behavior and a low reverse bias current, suggesting high quality interfaces between the stacked layers. In this work, all interfaces are based on van der Waals bonding, presenting a unique device architecture where crystalline, layered materials with atomically uniform thicknesses are stacked on demand, without the lattice parameter constraints. The results demonstrate the promise of using an all-layered material system for future electronic applications.
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