Literature DB >> 29878746

Characterization of Single Defects in Ultrascaled MoS2 Field-Effect Transistors.

Bernhard Stampfer1, Feng Zhang2, Yury Yuryevich Illarionov1,3, Theresia Knobloch1, Peng Wu2, Michael Waltl1, Alexander Grill1, Joerg Appenzeller2, Tibor Grasser1.   

Abstract

MoS2 has received a lot of attention lately as a semiconducting channel material for electronic devices, in part due to its large band gap as compared to that of other 2D materials. Yet, the performance and reliability of these devices are still severely limited by defects which act as traps for charge carriers, causing severely reduced mobilities, hysteresis, and long-term drift. Despite their importance, these defects are only poorly understood. One fundamental problem in defect characterization is that due to the large defect concentration only the average response to bias changes can be measured. On the basis of such averaged data, a detailed analysis of their properties and identification of particular defect types are difficult. To overcome this limitation, we here characterize single defects on MoS2 devices by performing measurements on ultrascaled transistors (∼65 × 50 nm) which contain only a few defects. These single defects are characterized electrically at varying gate biases and temperatures. The measured currents contain random telegraph noise, which is due to the transfer of charge between the channel of the transistors and individual defects, visible only due to the large impact of a single elementary charge on the local electrostatics in these small devices. Using hidden Markov models for statistical analysis, we extract the charge capture and emission times of a number of defects. By comparing the bias-dependence of the measured capture and emission times to the prediction of theoretical models, we provide simple rules to distinguish oxide traps from adsorbates on these back-gated devices. In addition, we give simple expressions to estimate the vertical and energetic positions of the defects. Using the methods presented in this work, it is possible to locate the sources of performance and reliability limitations in 2D devices and to probe defect distributions in oxide materials with 2D channel materials.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MoS2; SiO2; charge trapping; dichalcogenides; random telegraph noise; single defects; transistor

Year:  2018        PMID: 29878746     DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b00268

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  4 in total

Review 1.  Strategy and Future Prospects to Develop Room-Temperature-Recoverable NO2 Gas Sensor Based on Two-Dimensional Molybdenum Disulfide.

Authors:  Abhay V Agrawal; Naveen Kumar; Mukesh Kumar
Journal:  Nanomicro Lett       Date:  2021-01-04

2.  Bi2O2Se-Based True Random Number Generator for Security Applications.

Authors:  Bo Liu; Ying-Feng Chang; Juzhe Li; Xu Liu; Le An Wang; Dharmendra Verma; Hanyuan Liang; Hui Zhu; Yudi Zhao; Lain-Jong Li; Tuo-Hung Hou; Chao-Sung Lai
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2022-03-25       Impact factor: 18.027

3.  Semi-Automated Extraction of the Distribution of Single Defects for nMOS Transistors.

Authors:  Bernhard Stampfer; Franz Schanovsky; Tibor Grasser; Michael Waltl
Journal:  Micromachines (Basel)       Date:  2020-04-23       Impact factor: 2.891

Review 4.  Insulators for 2D nanoelectronics: the gap to bridge.

Authors:  Yury Yu Illarionov; Theresia Knobloch; Markus Jech; Mario Lanza; Deji Akinwande; Mikhail I Vexler; Thomas Mueller; Max C Lemme; Gianluca Fiori; Frank Schwierz; Tibor Grasser
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-07-07       Impact factor: 14.919

  4 in total

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