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1.
Small ; : e2404809, 2024 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39169700

ABSTRACT

2D semiconductors can drive advances in quantum science and technologies. However, they should be free of any contamination; also, the crystallographic ordering and coupling of adjacent layers and their electronic properties should be well-controlled, tunable, and scalable. Here, these challenges are addressed by a new approach, which combines molecular beam epitaxy and in situ band engineering in ultra-high vacuum of semiconducting gallium selenide (GaSe) on graphene. In situ studies by electron diffraction, scanning probe microscopy, and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy reveal that atomically-thin layers of GaSe align in the layer plane with the underlying lattice of graphene. The GaSe/graphene heterostructure, referred to as 2semgraphene, features a centrosymmetric (group symmetry D3d) polymorph of GaSe, a charge dipole at the GaSe/graphene interface, and a band structure tunable by the layer thickness. The newly-developed, scalable 2semgraphene is used in optical sensors that exploit the photoactive GaSe layer and the built-in potential at its interface with the graphene channel. This proof of concept has the potential for further advances and device architectures that exploit 2semgraphene as a functional building block.

2.
Nanotechnology ; 34(12)2023 Jan 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36595273

ABSTRACT

We use phenomenological modelling and detailed experimental studies of charge carrier transport to investigate the dependence of the electrical resistivity,ρ, on gate voltage,Vg, for a series of monolayer graphene field effect transistors with mobilities,µ, ranging between 5000 and 250 000 cm2V-1s-1at low-temperature. Our measurements over a wide range of temperatures from 4 to 400 K can be fitted by the universal relationµ=4/eδnmaxfor all devices, whereρmaxis the resistivity maximum at the neutrality point andδnis an 'uncertainty' in the bipolar carrier density, given by the full width at half maximum of the resistivity peak expressed in terms of carrier density,n. This relation is consistent with thermal broadening of the carrier distribution and the presence of the disordered potential landscape consisting of so-called electron-hole puddles near the Dirac point. To demonstrate its utility, we combine this relation with temperature-dependent linearised Boltzmann transport calculations that include the effect of optical phonon scattering. This approach demonstrates the similarity in the temperature-dependent behaviour of carriers in different types of single layer graphene transistors with widely differing carrier mobilities. It can also account for the relative stability, over a wide temperature range, of the measured carrier mobility of each device.

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