RESUMO
Aluminum nitride (AlN) thin films were grown using thermal atomic layer deposition in the temperature range of 175-350 °C. The thin films were deposited using trimethyl aluminum (TMA) and hydrazine (N2H4) as a metal precursor and nitrogen source, respectively. Highly reactive N2H4, compared to its conventionally used counterpart, ammonia (NH3), provides a higher growth per cycle (GPC), which is approximately 2.3 times higher at a deposition temperature of 300 °C and, also exhibits a low impurity concentration in as-deposited films. Low temperature AlN films deposited at 225 °C with a capping layer had an Al to N composition ratio of 1:1.1, a close to ideal composition ratio, with a low oxygen content (7.5%) while exhibiting a GPC of 0.16 nm/cycle. We suggest that N2H4 as a replacement for NH3 is a good alternative due to its stringent thermal budget.
RESUMO
Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) has been considered a promising dielectric for two-dimensional (2D) material-based electronics due to its atomically smooth and charge-free interface with an in-plane lattice constant similar to that of graphene. Here, we report atomic layer deposition of boron nitride (ALD-BN) using BCl3 and NH3 precursors directly on thermal SiO2 substrates at a relatively low temperature of 600 °C. The films were characterized by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy wherein the uniform, atomically smooth, and nanocrystalline layered-BN thin film growth is observed. The growth rate is â¼0.042 nm/cycle at 600 °C, a temperature significantly lower than that of h-BN grown by chemical vapor deposition. The dielectric properties of the ALD-BN measured from Metal Oxide Semiconductor Capacitors are comparable with that of SiO2. Moreover, the ALD-BN exhibits a 2-fold increase in carrier mobility of graphene field effect transistors (G-FETs/ALD-BN/SiO2) due to the lower surface charge density and inert surface of ALD-BN in comparison to that of G-FETs fabricated on bare SiO2. Therefore, this work suggests that the transfer-free deposition of ALD-BN on SiO2 may be a promising candidate as a substrate for high performance graphene devices.
RESUMO
The successful realization of high-performance 2D-materials-based nanoelectronics requires integration of high-quality dielectric films as a gate insulator. In this work, we explore the integration of organic and inorganic hybrid dielectrics on MoS2 and study the chemical and electrical properties of these hybrid films. Our atomic force microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Raman, and photoluminescence results show that, aside from the excellent film uniformity and thickness scalability down to 2.5 nm, the molecular layer deposition of octenyltrichlorosilane (OTS) and Al2O3 hybrid films preserves the chemical and structural integrity of the MoS2 surface. The XPS band alignment analysis and electrical characterization reveal that through the inclusion of an organic layer in the dielectric film, the band gap and dielectric constant can be tuned from â¼7.00 to 6.09 eV and â¼9.0 to 4.5, respectively. Furthermore, the hybrid films show promising dielectric properties, including a high breakdown field of â¼7.8 MV/cm, a low leakage current density of â¼1 × 10-6 A/cm2 at 1 MV/cm, a small hysteresis of â¼50 mV, and a top-gate subthreshold voltage swing of â¼79 mV/dec. Our experimental findings provide a facile way of fabricating scalable hybrid gate dielectrics on transition metal dichalcogenides for 2D-material-based flexible electronics applications.