Two-dimensional (2D) materials, such as molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ), have been shown to exhibit excellent electrical and optical properties. The semiconducting nature of MoS 2 allows it to overcome the shortcomings of zero-bandgap graphene, while still sharing many of graphene's advantages for electronic and optoelectronic applications. Discrete electronic and optoelectronic components, such as field-effect transistors, sensors and photodetectors made from few-layer MoS 2 show promising performance as potential substitute of Si in conventional electronics and of organic and amorphous Si semiconductors in ubiquitous systems and display applications. An important next step is the fabrication of fully integrated multi-stage circuits and logic building blocks on MoS 2 to demonstrate its capability for complex digital logic and high-frequency ac applications. This paper demonstrates an inverter, a NAND gate, a static random access memory, and a five-stage ring oscillator based on a direct-coupled transistor logic technology. The circuits comprise between two to twelve transistors seamlessly integrated side-byside on a single sheet of bilayer MoS 2 . Both enhancement-mode and depletion-mode transistors were fabricated thanks to the use of gate metals with different work functions. Keywords: molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ), transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD), Two-dimensional (2D)electronics, integrated circuits, ring oscillator.2 Two-dimensional (2D) materials, such as molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) 1 and other members of the transition metal dichalcogenides family, represents the ultimate scaling of material dimension in the vertical direction. Nano-electronic devices built on 2D materials offer many benefits for further miniaturization beyond Moore's Law 2,3 and as a high-mobility option in the emerging field of large-area and low-cost electronics that is currently dominated by low-mobility amorphous silicon 4 and organic semiconductors 5,6 . MoS 2 , a 2D semiconductor material, is also attractive as a potential complement to graphene 7,8,9 for constructing digital circuits on flexible and transparent substrates, while its 1.8 eV bandgap 10,11 is advantageous over silicon for suppressing the source-to-drain tunneling at the scaling limit of transistors 12 . Molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) is a layered semiconductor from the transition metal dichalcogenides material family (TMD), MX 2 (M=Mo, W; X=S, Se, Te) 10,11,19,20 . A single molecular layer of MoS 2 consists of a layer of Mo atoms sandwiched between two layers of sulfur atoms by covalent bonds 10 . The strong intra-layer covalent bonds confer MoS 2 crystals excellent mechanical strength, thermal stability up to 1090 C in inert environment 21 , and a surface free of dangling bonds. On the other hand, the weak inter-layer Van der Waal's force allows single-or fewlayer MoS 2 thin films to be created through micro-mechanical cleavage technique 22 and through anisotropic 2D 3 growth by chemical vapor deposition 23,24 . This unique property of MoS 2 , and 2D ...
Molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) field effect transistors (FET) were fabricated on atomically smooth large-area single layers grown by chemical vapor deposition. The layer qualities and physical properties were characterized using high-resolution Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy. Electronic performance of the FET devices was measured using field effect mobility measurements as a function of temperature. The back-gated devices had mobilities of 6.0 cm2/V s at 300 K without a high-κ dielectric overcoat and increased to 16.1 cm2/V s with a high-κ dielectric overcoat. In addition the devices show on/off ratios ranging from 105 to 109.
MoTe2 is an exfoliable transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) which crystallizes in three symmetries; the semiconducting trigonal-prismatic 2H−phase, the semimetallic 1T ′ monoclinic phase, and the semimetallic orthorhombic T d structure 1-4 . The 2H−phase displays a band gap of ∼ 1 eV 5 making it appealing for flexible and transparent optoelectronics. The T d−phase is predicted to possess unique topological properties 6-9 which might lead to topologically protected non-dissipative transport channels 9 . Recently, it was argued that it is possible to locally induce phasetransformations in TMDs 3,10,11,14 , through chemical doping 12 , local heating 13 , or electric-field 14,15 to achieve ohmic contacts or to induce useful functionalities such as electronic phase-change memory elements 11 . The combination of semiconducting and topological elements based upon the same compound, might produce a new generation of high performance, low dissipation optoelectronic elements. Here, we show that it is possible to engineer the phases of MoTe2 through W substitution by unveiling the phase-diagram of the Mo1−xWxTe2 solid solution which displays a semiconducting to semimetallic transition as a function of x. We find that only ∼ 8 % of W stabilizes the T d−phase at room temperature. Photoemission spectroscopy, indicates that this phase possesses a Fermi surface akin to that of WTe2 16 .The properties of semiconducting and of semimetallic MoTe 2 are of fundamental interest in their own right, but are also for their potential technological relevance. In the mono-or few-layer limit it is a direct-gap semiconductor, while the bulk has an indirect bandgap 5,17,18 of ∼ 1 eV. The size of the gap is similar to that of Si, making 2H−MoTe 2 particularly appealing for both purely electronic devices 19,20 and optoelectronic applications 21 . Moreover, the existence of different phases opens up the possibility for many novel devices and architectures. For example, controlled conversion of the 1T ′ −MoTe 2 phase to the 2H−phase, as recently reported 22 , could
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