Additive manufacturing of patterned 2D semiconductor through recyclable masked growth

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Abstract

The 2D van der Waals crystals have shown great promise as potential future electronic materials due to their atomically thin and smooth nature, highly tailorable electronic structure, and mass production compatibility through chemical synthesis. Electronic devices, such as field effect transistors (FETs), from these materials require patterning and fabrication into desired structures. Specifically, the scale up and future development of “2D”-based electronics will inevitably require large numbers of fabrication steps in the patterning of 2D semiconductors, such as transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). This is currently carried out via multiple steps of lithography, etching, and transfer. As 2D devices become more complex (e.g., numerous 2D materials, more layers, specific shapes, etc.), the patterning steps can become economically costly and time consuming. Here, we developed a method to directly synthesize a 2D semiconductor, monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ), in arbitrary patterns on insulating SiO 2 /Si via seed-promoted chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and substrate engineering. This method shows the potential of using the prepatterned substrates as a master template for the repeated growth of monolayer MoS 2 patterns. Our technique currently produces arbitrary monolayer MoS 2 patterns at a spatial resolution of 2 μm with excellent homogeneity and transistor performance (room temperature electron mobility of 30 cm 2 V −1 s −1 and on–off current ratio of 10 7 ). Extending this patterning method to other 2D materials can provide a facile method for the repeatable direct synthesis of 2D materials for future electronics and optoelectronics.

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Guo, Y., Shen, P. C., Su, C., Lu, A. Y., Hempel, M., Han, Y., … Kong, J. (2019). Additive manufacturing of patterned 2D semiconductor through recyclable masked growth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(9), 3437–3442. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1816197116

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