4.7 Article

Characterization of Electrical Properties of Suspended ZnO Nanowires Using a Nanorobotic Manipulation System Inside a Scanning Electron Microscope for Nanoelectronic Applications

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 1110-1120

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.1c03749

Keywords

ZnO nanowires; electrical properties; field-effect transistors; nanomanipulation; scanning electron microscope

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51205245,61573236]
  2. Joint Specialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education
  3. Scientific Research Foundation for the Returned Overseas Chinese Scholars
  4. State Education Ministry

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This study demonstrates a low-cost and feasible method for electrical characterization of semiconducting oxide nanowires. By utilizing tungsten nanoprobes and a nanomanipulation system, stable contacts were established for direct electrical measurements on individual and overlapped zinc oxide nanowires. The results provide valuable information on the intrinsic electrical properties of metal/semiconductor interfaces, with potential applications in nanoelectronic devices.
Electrical characterization of semiconducting oxide nanowires (NWs) is mostly performed using complex techniques, which necessitates a series of costly nanofabrication procedures. In this work, with the aim to provide a low-cost, feasible, facile, and reproducible approach for enabling the study of NW electrical properties, we report direct electrical measurements on individual and overlapped suspended zinc oxide NWs (ZnO NWs). We have succeeded in constructing both two- and three-terminal devices simply by employing tungsten (W) nanoprobes with the aid of a nanomanipulation system embedded inside a scanning electron microscope's vacuum chamber. Stable contacts were established using the Joule heating effect and e-beam exposure at the junctions between the NW and the pre-cleaned W tips. P-channel field-effect transistor devices were achieved with an on-off current ratio of similar to 10(1), a threshold voltage (>1.5 V), a transconductance of similar to 16 mu S, a sub-threshold swing of similar to 220 mV/decade, and field-effect carrier mobility roughly estimated to be around 926.4 cm(2)/(V.s) after correction for contact resistances/optimization. The average resistivity of ZnO NWs was calculated to be similar to 2.23 x 10(-2) Omega.cm for NWs with diameters between 70 and 500 nm. Besides, we have demonstrated a contact resistance of similar to 19.60 k Omega and a Schottky barrier height of similar to 0.37 eV present at W/ZnO NW interfaces. The contact resistance between two overlapped ZnO NWs was estimated to be similar to 283 k Omega, which is relatively higher than that offered between W/ZnO NWs. This work provides a solid experimental procedure to address true intrinsic electrical properties at metal/semiconductor interfaces, and our findings have potential applications in next-generation 3D suspended ZnO NW-based nanoelectronic devices.

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