| Literature DB >> 29062892 |
Jun Hong Park1,2,3, Atresh Sanne4, Yuzheng Guo5, Matin Amani6, Kehao Zhang7, Hema C P Movva4, Joshua A Robinson7, Ali Javey6, John Robertson8, Sanjay K Banerjee4, Andrew C Kummel3,9.
Abstract
Integration of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) into next-generation semiconductor platforms has been limited due to a lack of effective passivation techniques for defects in TMDs. The formation of an organic-inorganic van der Waals interface between a monolayer (ML) of titanyl phthalocyanine (TiOPc) and a ML of MoS2 is investigated as a defect passivation method. A strong negative charge transfer from MoS2 to TiOPc molecules is observed in scanning tunneling microscopy. As a result of the formation of a van der Waals interface, the ION/IOFF in back-gated MoS2 transistors increases by more than two orders of magnitude, whereas the degradation in the photoluminescence signal is suppressed. Density functional theory modeling reveals a van der Waals interaction that allows sufficient charge transfer to remove defect states in MoS2. The present organic-TMD interface is a model system to control the surface/interface states in TMDs by using charge transfer to a van der Waals bonded complex.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29062892 PMCID: PMC5650486 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1701661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136
Fig. 1Investigation of a bare ML MoS2 surface deposited on HOPG.
(A) Large-area STM image showing the ML MoS2 terrace (Vs = 2 V, It = 40 pA). (B) Line trace analysis of the white line in (A) and the schematic model of defects in MoS2. (C and D) Zoomed-in STM images of a single defect located on the ML MoS2 in the empty (Vs = 1 V) and filled (Vs = −1 V) states, respectively (It = 230 pA). Scale bar, 1 nm; (D) at same magnification as (C). (E) STS measured on the terrace of a ML MoS2; the black spectra are measured far away from the defects, whereas the red spectra are measured near a defect. (F) Spatial STS near the CB edge as a function of the distance from the defect.
Fig. 2Effects of the formation of the interface at TiOPc/MoS2.
(A) Few TiOPc molecules deposited on a MoS2 ML at 300 K (Vs = 2 V, It = 30 pA). Inset shows the molecular structure of TiOPc. (B) Cross-sectional line trace of an adsorbed TiOPc molecule. (C) Single TiOPc adsorption with a black background. (D) Subset of dI/dV/I/V spectra taken along the dashed arrow in (C). (E) Formation of a full-coverage ML TiOPc on a ML MoS2 and corresponding Fourier transform (Vs = 2 V, It = 50 pA). (F) STS of ML TiOPc on a ML MoS2.
Fig. 3DFT of TiOPc molecules adsorbed on ML MoS2.
(A) PDOS of MoS2 with no defects and a sulfur vacancy. (B) Absorption of two TiOPc molecules on MoS2 with a sulfur vacancy. (C) PDOS of TiOPc and MoS2 in TiOPc/MoS2. HOMO, highest occupied molecular orbital.
Fig. 4Electrical and PL characteristics of MoS2 ML, with and without ML TiOPc.
(A) Back-gated transfer characteristics of a ML MoS2 FET in log (solid curves) and linear (dashed curves) scales, before and after deposition of ML TiOPc. (B) Room temperature PL of exfoliated ML MoS2 before and after deposition of ML TiOPc. CPS, counts per second.