4.6 Article

Large-Area, Two-Dimensional MoS2 Exfoliated on Gold: Direct Experimental Access to the Metal-Semiconductor Interface

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 24, Pages 15929-15939

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c01570

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [SCHL 384/20-1, 406129719, SFB1242, 278162697]
  2. Interdisciplinary Center for Analytics on the Nanoscale (ICAN) - DFG [RI_00313]
  3. Open Access Publication Fund of the University of Duisburg-Essen

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This study presents a method to access the realistic metal-semiconductor interface by exfoliating single-layer MoS2 on gold surfaces, allowing for direct measurement of charge neutrality levels. By combining various findings, the researchers successfully explained the anomalous Raman signature of MoS2 in contact with metals, shedding light on the mechanism of Fermi level pinning at the MoS2-gold interface.
Two-dimensional semiconductors such as MoS2 are promising for future electrical devices. The interface to metals is a crucial and critical aspect for these devices because undesirably high resistances due to Fermi level pinning are present, resulting in unwanted energy losses. To date, experimental information on such junctions has been obtained mainly indirectly by evaluating transistor characteristics. The fact that the metal-semiconductor interface is typically embedded, further complicates the investigation of the underlying physical mechanisms at the interface. Here, we present a method to provide access to a realistic metal-semiconductor interface by large-area exfoliation of single-layer MoS2 on clean polycrystal-line gold surfaces. This approach allows us to measure the relative charge neutrality level at the MoS2-gold interface and its spatial variation almost directly using Kelvin probe force microscopy even under ambient conditions. By bringing together hitherto unconnected findings about the MoS2-gold interface, we can explain the anomalous Raman signature of MoS2 in contact to metals [ACS Nano. 7, 2013, 11350] which has been the subject of intense recent discussions. In detail, we identify the unusual Raman mode as the A(1g) mode with a reduced Raman shift (397 cm(-1)) due to the weakening of the Mo-S bond. Combined with our X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy data and the measured charge neutrality level, this is in good agreement with a previously predicted mechanism for Fermi level pinning at the MoS2-gold interface [Nano Lett. 14, 2014, 1714]. As a consequence, the strength of the MoS2-gold contact can be determined from the intensity ratio between the reduced A(1greduced) mode and the unperturbed A(1g) mode.

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