Single/Bi-layer Silicene Field-Effect Transistors and their Air-Stability
ORAL
Abstract
Silicene, the Si analogue of graphene, has the potential to be a widely tunable 2D material for novel nanoelectronics. Air-stability is a major issue for experimental investigation on silicene devices, which per this study has been greatly addressed by our encapsulated delamination with native electrodes (SEDNE) approach. SEDNE process preserves silicene/Ag interface during transfer and fabrication, and real-time Raman spectroscopy observes a short time window for Ag-removed silicene device stays intact and gradually degrades. In our predefined experiments, silicene devices exhibit an ambipolar charge transport behavior, corroborating theories on Dirac band in Ag-free silicene. Monolayer silicene device has extracted field-effect mobility within the theoretically predicted range and ON/OFF ratio greater than graphene, whereas bilayer silicene device shows lower mobilities and gate modulation similar to graphene. This work suggests a realistic prospect for improving air-stability of silicene devices and its tunable performance, which can be leveraged for other air-sensitive 2D materials. *Support from U.S. Army Research Office (W911NF-131-0364) and Future Emerging Technologies (270749) under European Commission are appreciated.
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Authors
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Li Tao
Microelectronics Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Texas 78758, USA
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Eugenio Cinquanta
Laboratorio MDM, IMM-CNR, via C. Olivetti 2, Agrate Brianza, I-20864, Italy
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Carlo Grazianetti
Laboratorio MDM, IMM-CNR, via C. Olivetti 2, Agrate Brianza, I-20864, Italy
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Alessandro Molle
Laboratorio MDM, IMM-CNR, via C. Olivetti 2, Agrate Brianza, I-20864, Italy, CNR-IMM, Laboratorio MDM
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Deji Akinwande
Microelectronics Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Texas 78758, USA, The University of Texas at Austin, Univ of Texas, Austin, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, TX 78712, UT Austin