4 research outputs found
Black Phosphorus–Zinc Oxide Nanomaterial Heterojunction for p–n Diode and Junction Field-Effect Transistor
Black phosphorus (BP) nanosheet is two-dimensional (2D)
semiconductor with distinct band gap and attracting recent attention
from researches because it has some similarity to gapless 2D semiconductor
graphene in the following two aspects: single element (P) for its
composition and quite high mobilities depending on its fabrication
conditions. Apart from several electronic applications reported with
BP nanosheet, here we report for the first time BP nanosheet–ZnO
nanowire 2D–1D heterojunction applications for p–n diodes
and BP-gated junction field effect transistors (JFETs) with n-ZnO
channel on glass. For these nanodevices, we take advantages of the
mechanical flexibility of p-type conducting of BP and van der Waals
junction interface between BP and ZnO. As a result, our BP–ZnO
nanodimension p–n diode displays a high ON/OFF ratio of ∼10<sup>4</sup> in static rectification and shows kilohertz dynamic rectification
as well while ZnO nanowire channel JFET operations are nicely demonstrated
by BP gate switching in both electrostatics and kilohertz dynamics
Impact of Organic Molecule-Induced Charge Transfer on Operating Voltage Control of Both n‑MoS<sub>2</sub> and p‑MoTe<sub>2</sub> Transistors
Since transition
metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors are
found as two-dimensional van der Waals materials with a discrete energy
bandgap, many TMD based field effect transistors (FETs) are reported
as prototype devices. However, overall reports indicate that threshold
voltage (Vth) of those FETs are located
far away from 0 V whether the channel is p- or n-type. This definitely
causes high switching voltage and unintended OFF-state leakage current.
Here, a facile way to simultaneously modulate the Vth of both p- and n-channel FETs with TMDs is reported.
The deposition of various organic small molecules on the channel results
in charge transfer between the organic molecule and TMD channels.
Especially, HAT-CN molecule is found to ideally work for both p- and
n-channels, shifting their Vth toward
0 V concurrently. As a proof of concept, a complementary metal oxide
semiconductor (CMOS) inverter with p-MoTe2 and n-MoS2 channels shows superior voltage gain and minimal power consumption
after HAT-CN deposition, compared to its initial performance. When
the same TMD FETs of the CMOS structure are integrated into an OLED
pixel circuit for ambipolar switching, the circuit with HAT-CN film
demonstrates complete ON/OFF switching of OLED pixel, which was not
switched off without HAT-CN
Impact of Organic Molecule-Induced Charge Transfer on Operating Voltage Control of Both n‑MoS<sub>2</sub> and p‑MoTe<sub>2</sub> Transistors
Since transition
metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors are
found as two-dimensional van der Waals materials with a discrete energy
bandgap, many TMD based field effect transistors (FETs) are reported
as prototype devices. However, overall reports indicate that threshold
voltage (Vth) of those FETs are located
far away from 0 V whether the channel is p- or n-type. This definitely
causes high switching voltage and unintended OFF-state leakage current.
Here, a facile way to simultaneously modulate the Vth of both p- and n-channel FETs with TMDs is reported.
The deposition of various organic small molecules on the channel results
in charge transfer between the organic molecule and TMD channels.
Especially, HAT-CN molecule is found to ideally work for both p- and
n-channels, shifting their Vth toward
0 V concurrently. As a proof of concept, a complementary metal oxide
semiconductor (CMOS) inverter with p-MoTe2 and n-MoS2 channels shows superior voltage gain and minimal power consumption
after HAT-CN deposition, compared to its initial performance. When
the same TMD FETs of the CMOS structure are integrated into an OLED
pixel circuit for ambipolar switching, the circuit with HAT-CN film
demonstrates complete ON/OFF switching of OLED pixel, which was not
switched off without HAT-CN
Low Power Consumption Complementary Inverters with n‑MoS<sub>2</sub> and p‑WSe<sub>2</sub> Dichalcogenide Nanosheets on Glass for Logic and Light-Emitting Diode Circuits
Two-dimensional
(2D) semiconductor materials with discrete bandgap become important
because of their interesting physical properties and potentials toward
future nanoscale electronics. Many 2D-based field effect transistors
(FETs) have thus been reported. Several attempts to fabricate 2D complementary
(CMOS) logic inverters have been made too. However, those CMOS devices
seldom showed the most important advantage of typical CMOS: low power
consumption. Here, we adopted p-WSe<sub>2</sub> and n-MoS<sub>2</sub> nanosheets separately for the channels of bottom-gate-patterned
FETs, to fabricate 2D dichalcogenide-based hetero-CMOS inverters on
the same glass substrate. Our hetero-CMOS inverters with electrically
isolated FETs demonstrate novel and superior device performances of
a maximum voltage gain as ∼27, sub-nanowatt power consumption,
almost ideal noise margin approaching 0.5<i>V</i><sub>DD</sub> (supply voltage, <i>V</i><sub>DD</sub> = 5 V) with a transition
voltage of 2.3 V, and ∼800 μs for switching delay. Moreover,
our glass-substrate CMOS device nicely performed digital logic (NOT,
OR, and AND) and push–pull circuits for organic light-emitting
diode switching, directly displaying the prospective of practical
applications