4.8 Article

Electron Transport across Vertical Silicon/MoS2/Graphene Heterostructures: Towards Efficient Emitter Diodes for Graphene Base Hot Electron Transistors

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 9656-9663

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b21691

Keywords

2D materials; TMD; MoS2; graphene; vertical heterostructures; electron transport; charge carrier transport; thermionic emission

Funding

  1. European Commission [785219, 829035]
  2. German Ministry of Education and Research, BMBF [03XP0210, 16ES1134]
  3. German Research Foundation, DFG [407080863]

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Heterostructures comprising silicon, molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), and graphene are investigated with respect to the vertical current conduction mechanism. The measured current voltage (I-V) characteristics exhibit temperature-dependent asymmetric current, indicating thermally activated charge carrier transport. The data are compared and fitted to a current-transport model that confirms thermionic emission as the responsible transport mechanism across devices. Theoretical calculations in combination with the experimental data suggest that the heterojunction barrier from Si to MoS2 is linearly temperature-dependent for T = 200-300 K with a positive temperature coefficient. The temperature dependence may be attributed to a change in band gap difference between Si and MoS2, strain at the Si/MoS2 interface, or different electron effective masses in Si and MoS2, leading to a possible entropy change stemming from variation in density of states as electrons move from Si to MoS2. The low barrier formed between Si and MoS2 and the resultant thermionic emission demonstrated here make the present devices potential candidates as the emitter diode of graphene base hot electron transistors for future high-speed electronics.

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