Deterministic grayscale nanotopography to engineer mobilities in strained MoS2 FETs

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Abstract

Field-effect transistors (FETs) based on two-dimensional materials (2DMs) with atomically thin channels have emerged as a promising platform for beyond-silicon electronics. However, low carrier mobility in 2DM transistors driven by phonon scattering remains a critical challenge. To address this issue, we propose the controlled introduction of localized tensile strain as an effective means to inhibit electron-phonon scattering in 2DM. Strain is achieved by conformally adhering the 2DM via van der Waals forces to a dielectric layer previously nanoengineered with a gray-tone topography. Our results show that monolayer MoS2 FETs under tensile strain achieve an 8-fold increase in on-state current, reaching mobilities of 185 cm²/Vs at room temperature, in good agreement with theoretical calculations. The present work on nanotopographic grayscale surface engineering and the use of high-quality dielectric materials has the potential to find application in the nanofabrication of photonic and nanoelectronic devices.

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APA

Liu, X., Erbas, B., Conde-Rubio, A., Rivano, N., Wang, Z., Jiang, J., … Brugger, J. (2024). Deterministic grayscale nanotopography to engineer mobilities in strained MoS2 FETs. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51165-4

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