All-Metallic Vertical Transistors Based on Stacked Dirac Materials

POSTER

Abstract

All metallic transistor can be fabricated from pristine semimetallic Dirac materials (such as graphene, silicene, and germanene), but the on/off current ratio is very low. In a vertical heterostructure composed by two Dirac materials, the Dirac cones of the two materials survive the weak interlayer van der Waals interaction based on density functional theory method, and electron transport from the Dirac cone of one material to the one of the other material is therefore forbidden without assistance of phonon because of momentum mismatch. First-principles quantum transport simulations of the all-metallic vertical Dirac material heterostructure devices confirm the existence of a transport gap of over 0.4 eV, accompanied by a switching ratio of over 10$^{4}$. Such a striking behavior is robust against the relative rotation between the two Dirac materials and can be extended to twisted bilayer graphene. Therefore, all-metallic junction can be a semiconductor and novel avenue is opened up for Dirac material vertical structures in high-performance devices without opening their band gaps.

Authors

  • Yangyang Wang

    School of Physics, Peking University

  • Zeyuan Ni

    School of Physics, Peking University

  • Qihang Liu

    University of Colorado, Boulder, University of Colorado

  • Ruge Quhe

    School of Physics, Peking University

  • Jiaxin Zheng

    School of Advanced Materials, Peking University, Shenzhen Graduate School

  • Meng Ye

    School of Physics, Peking University

  • Dapeng Yu

    School of Physics, Peking University, Peking Univ

  • Junjie Shi

    School of Physics, Peking University

  • Jinbo Yang

    School of Physics, Peking University

  • Ju Li

    Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering and Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Jing Lu

    School of Physics, Peking University