| Literature DB >> 28322299 |
Fu-Yu Shih1,2, Yueh-Chun Wu2, Yi-Siang Shih1, Ming-Chiuan Shih3, Tsuei-Shin Wu1,2, Po-Hsun Ho4, Chun-Wei Chen4, Yang-Fang Chen1, Ya-Ping Chiu1,5, Wei-Hua Wang2.
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) materials are composed of atomically thin crystals with an enormous surface-to-volume ratio, and their physical properties can be easily subjected to the change of the chemical environment. Encapsulation with other layered materials, such as hexagonal boron nitride, is a common practice; however, this approach often requires inextricable fabrication processes. Alternatively, it is intriguing to explore methods to control transport properties in the circumstance of no encapsulated layer. This is very challenging because of the ubiquitous presence of adsorbents, which can lead to charged-impurity scattering sites, charge traps, and recombination centers. Here, we show that the short-circuit photocurrent originated from the built-in electric field at the MoS2 junction is surprisingly insensitive to the gaseous environment over the range from a vacuum of 1 × 10-6 Torr to ambient condition. The environmental insensitivity of the short-circuit photocurrent is attributed to the characteristic of the diffusion current that is associated with the gradient of carrier density. Conversely, the photocurrent with bias exhibits typical persistent photoconductivity and greatly depends on the gaseous environment. The observation of environment-insensitive short-circuit photocurrent demonstrates an alternative method to design device structure for 2D-material-based optoelectronic applications.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28322299 PMCID: PMC5359557 DOI: 10.1038/srep44768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The structure and the photoresponse behaviors of the MoS2 junctions.
(a) A schematic diagram of a 1L-3L MoS2 junction transistor with the excitation beam focused on the MoS2 junction. (b) Optical image of a MoS2 junction transistor. The edge of the MoS2 junction is outlined by red lines. (c) Time-resolved photoresponse behaviors of the MoS2 junction transistor (sample A) under V = 50 mV (red curve) and V = 0 mV (blue curve) at V = 60 V.
Figure 2Time-resolved photoresponse of the MoS2 junctions.
The photocurrent behavior of the MoS2 junction transistor (sample B) under different gaseous conditions at (a) V = 0 mV and (b) V = 5 mV. The short-circuit photoresponse is virtually insensitive to the variation of the gaseous conditions.
The characteristics of the MoS2 junction (sample B) under different gaseous conditions.
| Vacuum | N2 | Ambient | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mobility | 0.5 | 0.14 | 0.09 |
| Threshold voltage | 5.5 V | 20 V | 25.5 V |
| VSD = 0 mV | −136 pA | −143 pA | −149 pA |
| VSD = 5 mV | 263 pA | 133 pA | 41 pA |
Figure 3VSD-dependent photoresponse of the MoS2 junctions.
(a) A schematic of the band structure of the MoS2 junction transistor and photoinduced carrier transfer at V = 0 V and V ≠ 0 V. (b) The photocurrent measurement of sample B corresponding to the photovoltaic effect (black squares) and the photoconductivity effect (red squares) as a function of V at V = 60 V. The excitation power is 200 μW.
Figure 4The STM/STS measurement of the MoS2 junctions.
(a) A schematic of the MoS2 junction structure with different layer in the STM/STS measurement. (b) Top: STM topography image of the MoS2 junction (sample C). Bottom: a cross-sectional topographic profile of the MoS2 junction. (c) An STM image of sample C with atomic-scale resolution, which indicates a pristine MoS2 surface. (d) Normalized dI/dV curves of 4 layer (green curve) and 8 layer (red curve) MoS2. The profiles are offset for clarity. (e) Band alignment across the MoS2 4- to 8-layer junction. Type-I band alignment at the MoS2 junction was implied.
Figure 5Field-effect-controlled short-circuit photocurrent of the MoS2 junction transistors.
(a) Output curves of the MoS2 junction device (sample B) in dark (black curve) and under 532 nm excitation focused on the MoS2 junction (red curve) at V = 60 V. (b) V dependence of the output curves under laser illumination (P = 200 μW) at the MoS2 junction. (c) Analysis of V dependence of V and I extracted from the output curves. (d) Excitation power dependence of I at zero bias at V = 0 V (black squares) and V = 60 V (red circles). The dashed lines are fitting curves of power law I ∝ P.