| Literature DB >> 31211505 |
Jianfeng Jiang1,2, Qinghua Zhang3, Aizhu Wang4, Yu Zhang2, Fanqi Meng3, Congcong Zhang4, Xianjin Feng2, Yuanping Feng5, Lin Gu3, Hong Liu4,6, Lin Han1.
Abstract
Although transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are attractive for the next-generation nanoelectronic era due to their unique optoelectronic and electronic properties, carrier scattering during the transmission of electronic devices, and the distinct contact barrier between the metal and the semiconductors, which is caused by inevitable defects in TMDs, remain formidable challenges. To address these issues, a facile, effective, and universal patching defect approach that uses a nitrogen plasma doping protocol is developed, via which the intrinsic vacancies are repaired effectively. To reveal sulfur vacancies and the nature of the nitrogen doping effects, a high-resolution spherical aberration corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy is used, which confirms the N atoms doping in sulfur vacancies. In this study, a typical TMD material, namely tungsten disulfide, is employed to fabricate field-effect transistors (FETs) as a preliminary paradigm to demonstrate the patching defects method. This doping method endows FETs with high electrical performance and excellent contact interface properties. As a result, an electron mobility of up to 184.2 cm2 V-1 s-1 and a threshold voltage of as low as 3.8 V are realized. This study provides a valuable approach to improve the performance of electronic devices that are based on TMDs in practical electronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: TMD materials; WS2 field-effect transistors; high-resolution spherical aberration correction TEM; nitrogen plasma doping; sulfur vacancy patching
Year: 2019 PMID: 31211505 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201901791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281