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1.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 12890, 2020 Jul 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32732940

ABSTRACT

While p-n homojunctions in two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenide materials have been widely reported, few show an ideality factor that is constant over more than a decade in current. In this paper, electric double layer p-i-n junctions in WSe2 are shown with substantially constant ideality factors (2-3) over more than 3 orders of magnitude in current. These lateral junctions use the solid polymer, polyethylene oxide: cesium perchlorate (PEO:CsClO4), to induce degenerate electron and hole carrier densities at the device contacts to form the junction. These high carrier densities aid in reducing the contact resistance and enable the exponential current dependence on voltage to be measured at higher currents than prior reports. Transport measurements of these WSe2 p-i-n homojunctions in combination with COMSOL multiphysics simulations are used to quantify the ion distributions, the semiconductor charge distributions, and the simulated band diagram of these junctions, to allow applications to be more clearly considered.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(49): 43166-43176, 2018 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30422628

ABSTRACT

Electric double layer (EDL) dynamics in graphene field-effect transistors (FETs) gated with polyethylene oxide (PEO)-based electrolytes are studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations from picoseconds to nanoseconds and experimentally from microseconds to milliseconds. Under an applied field of approximately mV/nm, EDL formation on graphene FETs gated with PEO:CsClO4 occurs on the timescale of microseconds at room temperature and strengthens within 1 ms to a sheet carrier density of nS ≈ 1013 cm-2. Stronger EDLs (i.e., larger nS) are induced experimentally by pulsing with applied voltages exceeding the electrochemical window of the electrolyte; electrochemistry is avoided using short pulses of a few milliseconds. Dynamics on picosecond to nanosecond timescales are accessed using MD simulations of PEO:LiClO4 between graphene electrodes with field strengths of hundreds of mV/nm which is 100× larger than experiment. At 100 mV/nm, EDL formation initiates in sub-nanoseconds achieving charge densities up to 6 × 1013 cm-2 within 3 nanoseconds. The modeling shows that under sufficiently high electric fields, EDLs with densities ∼1013 cm-2 can form within a nanosecond, which is a timescale relevant for high-performance electronics such as EDL transistors (EDLTs). Moreover, the combination of experiment and modeling shows that the timescale for EDL formation ( nS = 1013 to 1014 cm-2) can be tuned by 9 orders of magnitude by adjusting the field strength by only 3 orders of magnitude.

3.
ACS Nano ; 9(5): 4900-10, 2015 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25877681

ABSTRACT

Transition metal dichalcogenides are relevant for electronic devices owing to their sizable band gaps and absence of dangling bonds on their surfaces. For device development, a controllable method for doping these materials is essential. In this paper, we demonstrate an electrostatic gating method using a solid polymer electrolyte, poly(ethylene oxide) and CsClO4, on exfoliated, multilayer 2H-MoTe2. The electrolyte enables the device to be efficiently reconfigured between n- and p-channel operation with ON/OFF ratios of approximately 5 decades. Sheet carrier densities as high as 1.6 × 10(13) cm(-2) can be achieved because of a large electric double layer capacitance (measured as 4 µF/cm(2)). Further, we show that an in-plane electric field can be used to establish a cation/anion transition region between source and drain, forming a p-n junction in the 2H-MoTe2 channel. This junction is locked in place by decreasing the temperature of the device below the glass transition temperature of the electrolyte. The ideality factor of the p-n junction is 2.3, suggesting that the junction is recombination dominated.

4.
Nano Lett ; 13(1): 131-6, 2013 Jan 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23244683

ABSTRACT

We report the direct measurement of the Dirac point, the Fermi level, and the work function of graphene by performing internal photoemission measurements on a graphene/SiO(2)/Si structure with a unique optical-cavity enhanced test structure. A complete electronic band alignment at the graphene/SiO(2)/Si interfaces is accurately established. The observation of enhanced photoemission from a one-atom thick graphene layer was possible by taking advantage of the constructive optical interference in the SiO(2) cavity. The photoemission yield was found to follow the well-known linear density-of-states dispersion in the vicinity of the Dirac point. At the flat band condition, the Fermi level was extracted and found to reside 3.3 eV ± 0.05 eV below the bottom of the SiO(2) conduction band. When combined with the shift of the Fermi level from the Dirac point, we are able to ascertain the position of the Dirac point at 3.6 eV ± 0.05 eV with respect to the bottom of the SiO(2) conduction band edge, yielding a work function of 4.5 eV ± 0.05 eV which is in an excellent agreement with theory. The accurate determination of the work function of graphene is of significant importance to the engineering of graphene-based devices, and the measurement technique we have advanced in this Letter will have significant impact on numerous applications for emerging graphene-like 2-dimensional material systems.

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