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1.
ACS Nano ; 17(22): 22388-22398, 2023 Nov 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37947443

ABSTRACT

MoTe2 can be converted from the semiconducting (2H) phase to the semimetallic (1T') phase by several stimuli including heat, electrochemical doping, and strain. This type of phase transition, if reversible and gate-controlled, could be useful for low-power memory and logic. In this work, a gate-controlled and fully reversible 2H to 1T' phase transition is demonstrated via strain in few-layer suspended MoTe2 field effect transistors. Strain is applied by the electric double layer gating of a suspended channel using a single ion conducting solid polymer electrolyte. The phase transition is confirmed by simultaneous electrical transport and Raman spectroscopy. The out-of-plane vibration peak (A1g)─a signature of the 1T' phase─is observed when VSG ≥ 2.5 V. Further, a redshift in the in-plane vibration mode (E2g) is detected, which is a characteristic of a strain-induced phonon shift. Based on the magnitude of the shift, strain is estimated to be 0.2-0.3% by density functional theory. Electrically, the temperature coefficient of resistance transitions from negative to positive at VSG ≥ 2 V, confirming the transition from semiconducting to metallic. The approach to gate-controlled, reversible straining presented here can be extended to strain other two-dimensional materials, explore fundamental material properties, and introduce electronic device functionalities.

2.
ACS Nano ; 15(12): 19439-19445, 2021 Dec 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34878266

ABSTRACT

Two-dimensional materials are an emerging class of materials with a wide range of electrical and optical properties and potential applications. Single-layer structures of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides are gaining increasing attention for use in field-effect transistors. Here, we report a photoluminescence switching effect based on single-layer WSe2 transistors. Dual gates are used to tune the photoluminescence intensity. In particular, a side-gate is utilized to control the location of ions within a solid polymer electrolyte to form an electric double layer at the interface of electrolyte and WSe2 and induce a vertical electric field. Additionally, a back-gate is used to apply a second vertical electric field. An on-off ratio of the light emission up to 90 was observed under constant pump light intensity. In addition, a blue shift of the photoluminescence line up to 36 meV was observed. We attribute this blue shift to the decrease of exciton binding energy due to the change of nonlinear in-plane dielectric constant and use it to determine the third-order off-diagonal susceptibility χ(3) = 3.50 × 10-19 m2/V2.

3.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(5)2020 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32121528

ABSTRACT

A gateless lateral p-n junction with reconfigurability is demonstrated on graphene by ion-locking using solid polymer electrolytes. Ions in the electrolytes are used to configure electric-double-layers (EDLs) that induce p- and n-type regions in graphene. These EDLs are locked in place by two different electrolytes with distinct mechanisms: (1) a polyethylene oxide (PEO)-based electrolyte, PEO:CsClO4, is locked by thermal quenching (i.e., operating temperature < Tg (glass transition temperature)), and (2) a custom-synthesized, doubly-polymerizable ionic liquid (DPIL) is locked by thermally triggered polymerization that enables room temperature operation. Both approaches are gateless because only the source/drain terminals are required to create the junction, and both show two current minima in the backgated transfer measurements, which is a signature of a graphene p-n junction. The PEO:CsClO4 gated p-n junction is reconfigured to n-p by resetting the device at room temperature, reprogramming, and cooling to T < Tg. These results show an alternate approach to locking EDLs on 2D devices and suggest a path forward to reconfigurable, gateless lateral p-n junctions with potential applications in polymorphic logic circuits.

4.
Nano Lett ; 19(12): 8911-8919, 2019 12 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31661286

ABSTRACT

A molecularly thin electrolyte is developed to demonstrate a nonvolatile, solid-state, one-transistor (1T) memory based on an electric-double-layer (EDL) gated WSe2 field-effect transistor (FET). The custom-designed monolayer electrolyte consists of cobalt crown ether phthalocyanine and lithium ions, which are positioned by field-effect at either the surface of the WSe2 channel or an h-BN capping layer to achieve "1" or "0", respectively. Bistability in the monolayer electrolyte memory is significantly improved by the h-BN cap with density functional theory (DFT) calculations showing enhanced trapping of Li+ near h-BN due to a ∼1.34 eV increase in the absolute value of the adsorption energy compared to vacuum. The threshold voltage shift between the two states corresponds to a change in charge density of ∼2.5 × 1012 cm-2, and an On/Off ratio exceeding 104 at a back gate voltage of 0 V. The On/Off ratio remains stable after 1000 cycles and the retention time for each state exceeds 6 h (max measured). When the write time approaches 1 ms, the On/Off ratio remains >102, showing that the monolayer electrolyte-gated FET can respond on time scales similar to existing flash memory. The data suggest that faster switching times and lower switching voltages could be feasible by top gating.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(39): 35879-35887, 2019 Oct 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31486629

ABSTRACT

Electric double-layer (EDL) gating using a custom-synthesized polyester single-ion conductor (PE400-Li) is demonstrated on two-dimensional (2D) crystals for the first time. The electronic properties of graphene and MoTe2 field-effect transistors (FETs) gated with the single-ion conductor are directly compared to a poly(ethylene oxide) dual-ion conductor (PEO:CsClO4). The anions in the single-ion conductor are covalently bound to the backbone of the polymer, leaving only the cations free to form an EDL at the negative electrode and a corresponding cationic depletion layer at the positive electrode. Because the cations are mobile in both the single- and dual-ion conductors, a similar enhancement of the n-branch is observed in both graphene and MoTe2. Specifically, the single-ion conductor decreases the subthreshold swing in the n-branch of the bare MoTe2 FET from 5000 to 250 mV/dec and increases the current density and on/off ratio by two orders of magnitude. However, the single-ion conductor suppressed the p-branch in both the graphene and the MoTe2 FETs, and finite element modeling of ion transport shows that this result is unique to single-ion conductor gating in combination with an asymmetric gate/channel geometry. Both the experiments and modeling suggest that single-ion conductor-gated FETs can achieve sheet densities up to 1014 cm-2, which corresponds to a charge density that would theoretically be sufficient to induce several percent strain in monolayer 2D crystals and potentially induce a semiconductor-to-metal phase transition in MoTe2.

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