3.8 Proceedings Paper

Geometric Diode Modeling for Energy Harvesting Applications

Publisher

IEEE
DOI: 10.1109/PIERS55526.2022.9792827

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Project H2020 NANO-EH [951761]
  2. Romanian Ministry of Education and Research, CNCS/CCCDI-UEFISCDI within PNCDI III [PN-III-P3-3.6-H2020-2020-0072, PN-III-P4-ID-PCCF-20160033]

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Transition metal dicalchogenides (TMDCs) are materials with unique chemical and physical properties, especially molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) which has great potential in microelectronics and solar energy applications. Geometric diodes, as a new type of diode structure, have advantages such as simple fabrication process, high breakdown voltage, and low parasitic effects.
Transition metal dicalchogenides (TMDCs) are material whose fundamental structure consists of one atom of transition metal and two atoms of chalcogen. The interest on these compounds has constantly increased because of their peculiar chemical and physical properties. Among TMDCs, we can find molybdenum ditelluride, tungsten diselenide, molybdenum diselenide, and molybdenum disulfide (MoTe2, WeSe(2), MoSe2, and MoS2, respectively). When using few-atom-thick layers, MoS2 (also known as molybdenite has shown the possibility of outperforming the current silicon technology and of being used in many different applications, such as sensors, solar cells, photo detectors, field-effect transistor, and geometric diodes. The latter present different advantages with respect to classical diode structures because a geometric diode is created by etching channels in a planar semiconductor/semimetal, thus forming a so-called self-switching diode (SSD), which has demonstrated to detect both microwave and THz signals. An SSD is different from classical diodes, in the sense that no junctions are necessary (hence no doping), and its physics relies upon a nonlinear current, which flows through nanometer-sized parallel channels and is controlled by field-effect phenomena. The simplicity in the fabrication process, a higher breakdown voltage, and less parasitic effects are among the advantages of such diodes. In this work, by means of full-wave drift-diffusion equation-based simulations, we show a physical model for MoS2-based geometric diodes, which have lately demonstrated to be possible candidates in both microwave and solar energy harvesting applications. The validation of this model will be performed through comparisons with experimental data retrieved from two different geometrical/technological configurations. In the first one, we consider a bulk (i.e., multilayer, bandgap of 1:2 eV) MoS2 and a hydrogen silsesquioxane (HSiO3/2)(n) encapsulation; the second one is an analogous structure that comprises a monolayer MoS2 (bandgap of 1:85 eV) with an Al2O3 encapsulation obtained by depositing a 3-nm-thick layer of Al to prevent the oxidation of the MoS2 monolayer.

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