Login / Signup

Atomic Layer MoTe 2 Field-Effect Transistors and Monolithic Logic Circuits Configured by Scanning Laser Annealing.

Xia LiuArnob IslamNing YangBradley OdhnerMary Anne TuptaJing GuoPhilip X-L Feng
Published in: ACS nano (2021)
Atomically thin semiconductors such as transition metal dichalcogenides have recently enabled diverse devices in the emerging two-dimensional (2D) electronics. While scalable 2D electronics demand monolithic integrated circuits consisting of complementary p-type and n-type transistors, conventional p-type and n-type doping in desired regions, monolithically in the same semiconducting atomic layers, remains elusive or impractical. Here, we report on an agile, high-precision scanning laser annealing approach to realizing 2D monolithic complementary logic circuits on atomically thin MoTe 2 , by reliably designating p-type and n-type transport polarity in the constituent transistors via localized laser annealing and modification of their Schottky contacts. Pristine p-type field-effect transistors (FETs) transform into n-type ones upon controlled laser annealing on their source/drain gold electrodes, exhibiting a mobility of 96.5 cm 2 V -1 s -1 (the highest known to date) and an On/Off ratio of 10 6 . Elucidation and validation of such an on-demand configuration of polarity in MoTe 2 FETs further enable the construction and demonstration of essential logic circuits, including both inverter and NOR gates. This dopant-free, spatially precise scanning laser annealing approach to configuring monolithic complementary logic integrated circuits may enable programmable functions in 2D semiconductors, exhibiting potential for additively manufactured, scalable 2D electronics.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • liquid chromatography
  • ionic liquid
  • mass spectrometry
  • solid phase extraction
  • solar cells
  • solid state