34 research outputs found

    Field emission from single multi-wall carbon nanotubes

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    Electron field emission characteristics of individual multiwalled carbon nanotubes have been investigated by a piezoelectric nanomanipulation system operating inside a scanning electron microscopy chamber. The experimental setup ensures a high control capability on the geometric parameters of the field emission system (CNT length, diameter and anode-cathode distance). For several multiwalled carbon nanotubes, reproducible and quite stable emission current behaviour has been obtained with a dependence on the applied voltage well described by a series resistance modified Fowler-Nordheim model. A turn-on field of about 30 V/um and a field enhancement factor of around 100 at a cathode-anode distance of the order of 1 um have been evaluated. Finally, the effect of selective electron beam irradiation on the nanotube field emission capabilities has been extensively investigated.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure

    Local probing of the field emission stability of vertically aligned multiwalled carbon nanotubes

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    Metallic cantilever in high vacuum atomic force microscope has been used as anode for field emission experiments from densely packed vertically aligned multi-walled carbon nanotubes. The high spatial resolution provided by the scanning probe technique allowed precise setting of the tip-sample distance in the submicron region. The dimension of the probe (curvature radius below 50nm) allowed to measure current contribution from sample areas smaller than 1um^2. The study of long-term stability evidenced that on these small areas the field emission current remains stable (within 10% fluctuations) several hours (at least up to 72 hours) at current intensities between 10-5A and 10-8A. Improvement of the current stability has been observed after performing long-time Joule heating conditioning to completely remove possible adsorbates on the nanotubes.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure

    Vacuum gauge from ultrathin MoS2 transistor

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    We fabricate monolayer MoS2 field effect transistors and study their electric characteristics from 10^-6 Torr to atmospheric air pressure. We show that the threshold voltage of the transistor increases with the growing pressure. Hence, we propose the device as an air pressure sensor, showing that it is particularly suitable as a low power consumption vacuum gauge. The device functions on pressure-dependent O2, N2 and H2O molecule adsorption that affect the n-doping of the MoS2 channel.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure - conference pape

    Field emission characterization of MoS2 nanoflowers

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    Nanostructured materials have wide potential applicability as field emitters due to their high aspect ratio. We hydrothermally synthesized MoS2 nanoflowers on copper foil and characterized their field emission properties, by applying a tip-anode configuration in which a tungsten tip with curvature radius down to 30–100 nm has been used as the anode to measure local properties from small areas down to 1–100 μm2. We demonstrate that MoS2 nanoflowers can be competitive with other well-established field emitters. Indeed, we show that a stable field emission current can be measured with a turn-on field as low as 12 V/μm and a field enhancement factor up to 880 at 0.6 μm cathode–anode separation distance

    Gas dependent hysteresis in MoS2_2 field effect transistors

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    We study the effect of electric stress, gas pressure and gas type on the hysteresis in the transfer characteristics of monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) field effect transistors. The presence of defects and point vacancies in the MoS2 crystal structure facilitates the adsorption of oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen or methane, which strongly affect the transistor electrical characteristics. Although the gas adsorption does not modify the conduction type, we demonstrate a correlation between hysteresis width and adsorption energy onto the MoS2 surface. We show that hysteresis is controllable by pressure and/or gas type. Hysteresis features two well-separated current levels, especially when gases are stably adsorbed on the channel, which can be exploited in memory devices.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    two dimensional effects in fowler nordheim field emission from transition metal dichalcogenides

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    We report field emission from bilayer MoS 2 and monolayer WSe 2 synthesized by CVD on SiO 2/Si substrate. We show that the emitted current follows a Fowler-Nordheim model modified to account for the two-dimensional confinement of charge carriers. We derive the figures of merit of field emission and demonstrate that few-layer transition-metal dichalcogenides are suitable for field emission applications

    Space charge limited current and photoconductive effect in few-layer MoS2

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    We analyse the conduction mechanism and the electrical photoresponse of chemical-vapor deposited MoS2 few-layers on SiO2/Si substrate. We perform temperature dependent I-V measurements and report a space-charge limited conduction due to the presence of an exponential distribution of trap states in the MoS2 band-gap. We estimate the density of trap states as 1010 – 1011 cm −2 from the temperature-independent critical drain-source voltage. We also investigate the MoS2 photocurrent under white light at different incident powers. We use a modified Hornbeck-Hayens model to study the photoconductive effect and for an alternative estimation of the trap state density
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