4.8 Article

Mobility Extraction in 2D Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Devices-Avoiding Contact Resistance Implicated Overestimation

Journal

SMALL
Volume 17, Issue 28, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202100940

Keywords

doping; mobility overestimations; Schottky barrier devices; thin gate dielectrics; transition metal dichalcogenides

Funding

  1. Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) program - NIST [70NANB17H041]
  2. Material Genome Initiative

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Schottky barrier transistors operate differently from conventional transistors, with gate impact on carrier injection from metal source/drain into channel. The contact gating impact in the on-state and complexities in determining true carrier concentration have not been comprehensively studied; traditional approach of deriving mobility from maximum transconductance may overestimate mobility. Experimental analysis evaluates impact of different oxide thicknesses, SB heights, and doping-induced reductions on device metrics.
Schottky barrier (SB) transistors operate distinctly different from conventional metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors, in a unique way that the gate impacts the carrier injection from the metal source/drain contacts into the channel region. While it has been long recognized that this can have severe implications for device characteristics in the subthreshold region, impacts of contact gating of SB in the on-state of the devices, which affects evaluation of intrinsic channel properties, have been yet comprehensively studied. Due to the fact that contact resistance (R-C) is always gate-dependent in a typical back-gated device structure, the traditional approach of deriving field-effect mobility from the maximum transconductance (g(m)) is in principle not correct and can even overestimate the mobility. In addition, an exhibition of two different threshold voltages for the channel and the contact region leads to another layer of complexity in determining the true carrier concentration calculated from Q = C-OX * (V-G-V-TH). Through a detailed experimental analysis, the effect of different effective oxide thicknesses, distinct SB heights, and doping-induced reductions in the SB width are carefully evaluated to gain a better understanding of their impact on important device metrics.

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