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Ordered-vacancy-enabled indium sulphide printed in wafer-scale with enhanced electron mobility

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 13:19 authored by Azmira Jannat, Qifeng Yao, Ali Zavabeti, Nitu SyedNitu Syed, Baoyue ZhangBaoyue Zhang, Taimur AhmedTaimur Ahmed, Sruthi Kuriakose, Md Mohiuddin, Naresha Pillai, Farjana Haque, Guanghui RenGuanghui Ren, Sherif Abbas, Michelle SpencerMichelle Spencer, Billy Murdoch, Lan Wang, Christopher McConvilleChristopher McConville, Sumeet WaliaSumeet Walia, Torben DaenekeTorben Daeneke, Jianzhen OuJianzhen Ou
Metal chalcogenides are important members of the two-dimensional (2D) materials family and have been extensively investigated for high-performance electronic device applications. However, when they are produced on a large-scale, their carrier mobilities are strongly influenced by the surface conditions. Here, we print indium sulphide (In2S3) with the thickness down to the single unit cell limit on wafer-scale out of metallic indium liquid, in which structural indium vacancies are formed in an orderly fashion. First principles investigations reveal that the unique ordered-vacancy structure results in a highly dispersive conduction band with low effective electron mass, forming multiple band-like electronic transport channels sandwiched within the crystal structure which are less influenced by the surface conditions. Back-gated field effect transistors are fabricated, and the measured mobility is up to 58 cm2 V-1 s-1 with a high degree of reproducibility, which is amongst one of the highest reported for wafer-scale-grown ultra-thin metal chalcogenides. This establishes ordered-vacancy-enabled semiconductors in the 2D geometry as suitable alternatives for new generation high-performance electronic devices.

History

Journal

Materials Horizons

Volume

7

Issue

3

Start page

827

End page

834

Total pages

8

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Former Identifier

2006098240

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2020-04-21

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