PhD Defense: Electronic and spintronic devices using two-dimensional materials
CIC nanoGUNE Seminars
- Speaker
-
CFM Auditorium
- When
-
2017/05/30
13:00 - Place
- nanoGUNE seminar room, Tolosa Hiribidea 76, Donostia - San Sebastian
- Add to calendar
- iCal
Ever since in 2004 atomically-thin two-dimensional van der Waals materials
became available to the scientific community, at the reach of manual microexfoliation
techniques, their implementation in novel device structures and concepts promised
disruptive new applications and motivated research in a vast range of fields.
Confined to the thinnest possible thickness, electrons in these materials exhibit a
plethora of electronic properties, from semiconducting MoS2, to superconductor NbSe2,
dielectric BN, and, jack-of-all-trades, graphene.
In this thesis, we explore fundamental and applied aspects of chemical vapor
deposition (CVD) graphene, MoS2, and WSe2 using electronic device structures that use
them as transporting channel, namely field-effect transistors (FETs), Hall bars, and
diodes.
MoS2 is a n-type semiconducting 2D vdW that complements one of the weak
aspects of graphene-based transistors, which is the small ratio between the maximum
current output and of the minimum current output of the transistors (ON/OFF ratio).
Using MoS2 we identify an electron doping constraint for performing stable
magnetotransport measurements, and we investigate the origins of the strong current
fluctuations of the FETs. We study the low-frequency noise (LFN) of the current output
of devices made with different layer thicknesses, and use the strong light-matter
interactions of MoS2 to employ photodoping techniques together with the electrostatic
gating to dope the channel. By converging all these conditions, we are able to discern a
mechanism behind the different types of LFN noise reported in literature for MoS2,
while at the same time identifying a LFN crossover driven by photodoping from carriernumber
fluctuations to Hooge-mobility fluctuations.
With p-type semiconducting WSe2 we optimize the electron and hole transport
properties of ambipolar FETs by considering BN as a top and bottom interface substrate
and encapsulation layer, respectively. By doing so, we are able to address to some
extent the strong hysteretic effects that adversely affect the operation of WSe2 FETs on
oxide substrates, and improve the overall device performance.
The versatility of CVD graphene allows us to do both applied and fundamental
studies, both related to spintronics and electronics.
The unique properties of graphene make it a core material in the search of fullelectrical
approaches to generate, transport, and detect spin currents without the use of
magnetic elements. Using a Hall bar shaped sample, non-local signals in graphene have
been demonstrated to be associated with spin transport. In our case, we use the large
area availability of CVD graphene to study non-local effects in an unlikely scenario for
the transport of spins. We study the non-local signals of millimeter-sized Hall bars of
CVD graphene, and by doing a systematic study as a function of device scale, from
macro-to-microscale we identify a mechanism that cannot be connected with spin
diffusion that also leads to large signals. By evaluating the microscopic details of the
samples, and the different effects observed, we propose the counterpropagating edge
states shunted by grain boundaries to drive such effects.
In a more applied manner, we use CVD graphene for two other types of devices.
First, we study the use of graphene as an electrode material for lateral and vertical fieldeffect
transistors that operate using organic channels, and determine that the low density
of states of graphene allows for unscreened electric fields to reach the organic layer and
enable the transistor operation in the vertical geometry.
The second applied study is the large-scale fabrication of diodes using CVD
graphene. Benefiting from the ultra-thin cross-section of graphene, and using a lateral
geometry, we demonstrate the reliable fabrication of lateral metal/insulator/graphene
diodes using Ti and TiO2 as metal and insulating layers, respectively. The time
constants determined from the direct-current analysis place the operation of the
fabricated devices in the THz range. Additionally, the material combination considered
enabled large current densities based on field emission processes.
**
**
**
**
**
Supervisors** : Luis Hueso and Felix Casanova