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Wafer-Scale Epitaxial Growth of an Atomically Thin Single-Crystal Insulator as a Substrate of Two-Dimensional Material Field-Effect Transistors.

Eun Hye KimDo Hee LeeTae Jun GuHyobin YooYamujin JangJaemo JeongHyun-Woo KimSeog-Gyun KangHoijoon KimHeesoo LeeKyu-Jin JoBeom Ju KimJin Wook KimSeong Hyun ImChang Seok OhChanggu LeeKi Kang KimCheol-Woong YangHyoungsub KimYoungkuk KimPhilip KimHyeon-Sik JangJoung Real Ahn
Published in: Nano letters (2023)
As the electron mobility of two-dimensional (2D) materials is dependent on an insulating substrate, the nonuniform surface charge and morphology of silicon dioxide (SiO 2 ) layers degrade the electron mobility of 2D materials. Here, we demonstrate that an atomically thin single-crystal insulating layer of silicon oxynitride (SiON) can be grown epitaxially on a SiC wafer at a wafer scale and find that the electron mobility of graphene field-effect transistors on the SiON layer is 1.5 times higher than that of graphene field-effect transistors on typical SiO 2 films. Microscale and nanoscale void defects caused by heterostructure growth were eliminated for the wafer-scale growth of the single-crystal SiON layer. The single-crystal SiON layer can be grown on a SiC wafer with a single thermal process. This simple fabrication process, compatible with commercial semiconductor fabrication processes, makes the layer an excellent replacement for the SiO 2 /Si wafer.
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