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1.
ACS Nano ; 12(6): 5368-5375, 2018 Jun 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29878746

RESUMEN

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.

2.
ACS Nano ; 10(10): 9543-9549, 2016 Oct 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27704779

RESUMEN

Black phosphorus has been recently suggested as a very promising material for use in 2D field-effect transistors. However, due to its poor stability under ambient conditions, this material has not yet received as much attention as for instance MoS2. We show that the recently demonstrated Al2O3 encapsulation leads to highly stable devices. In particular, we report our long-term study on highly stable black phosphorus field-effect transistors, which show stable device characteristics for at least eight months. This high stability allows us to perform a detailed analysis of their reliability with respect to hysteresis as well as the arguably most important reliability issue in silicon technologies, the bias-temperature instability. We find that the hysteresis in these transistors depends strongly on the sweep rate and temperature. Moreover, the hysteresis dynamics in our devices are reproducible over a long time, which underlines their high reliability. Also, by using detailed physical models for oxide traps developed for Si technologies, we are able to capture the channel electrostatics of the black phosphorus FETs and determine the position of the defect energy band. Finally, we demonstrate that both hysteresis and bias-temperature instabilities are due to thermally activated charge trapping/detrapping by oxide traps and can be reduced if the device is covered by Teflon-AF.

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