| Literature DB >> 28661128 |
Po-Hsun Ho1, Yih-Ren Chang2, Yu-Cheng Chu1, Min-Ken Li2, Che-An Tsai3, Wei-Hua Wang3, Ching-Hwa Ho4, Chun-Wei Chen2, Po-Wen Chiu1,3.
Abstract
In search of high-performance field-effect transistors (FETs) made of atomic thin semiconductors, indium selenide (InSe) has held great promise because of its high intrinsic mobility and moderate electronic band gap (1.26 eV). Yet the performance of InSe FETs is decisively determined by the surface oxidation of InSe taking place spontaneously in ambient conditions, setting up a mobility ceiling and causing an uncontrollable current hysteresis. Encapsulation by hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) has been currently used to cope with this deterioration. Here, we provide insights into the role of surface oxides played in device performance and introduce a dry-oxidation process that forms a dense capping layer on top, where InSe FETs exhibit a record-high two-probe mobility of 423 cm2/V·s at room temperature and 1006 cm2/V·s at liquid nitrogen temperature without the use of h-BN encapsulation or high-κ dielectric screening. Ultrahigh on/off current ratio of >108 and current density of 365 μA/μm can be readily achieved without elaborate engineering of drain/source contacts or gating technique. Thickness-dependent device properties are also studied, with optimized performance shown in FETs comprising of 13 nm thick InSe. The high performance of InSe FETs with ultrathin dry oxide is attributed to the effective unpinning of the Fermi level at the metal contacts, resulting in a low Schottky barrier height of 40 meV in an optimized channel thickness.Entities:
Keywords: high-mobility transistors; hysteresis; indium selenide; native capping layer; oxidation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28661128 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b03531
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881