Element doping allows manipulation of the electronic properties of 2D materials. Enhanced transport performances and ambient stability of black-phosphorus devices by Te doping are presented. This provides a facile route for achieving airstable black-phosphorus devices.
Black phosphorus (BP) has drawn great attention owing to its tunable band gap depending on thickness, high mobility, and large I/ I ratio, which makes BP attractive for using in future two-dimensional electronic and optoelectronic devices. However, its instability under ambient conditions poses challenge to the research and limits its practical applications. In this work, we present a feasible approach to suppress the degradation of BP by sulfur (S) doping. The fabricated S-doped BP few-layer field-effect transistors (FETs) show more stable transistor performance under ambient conditions. After exposing to air for 21 days, the charge-carrier mobility of a representative S-doped BP FETs device decreases from 607 to 470 cm V s (remained as high as 77.4%) under ambient conditions and a large I/ I ratio of ∼10 is still retained. The atomic force microscopy analysis, including surface morphology, thickness, and roughness, also indicates the lower degradation rate of S-doped BP compared to BP. First-principles calculations show that the dopant S atom energetically prefers to chemisorb on the BP surface in a dangling form and the enhanced stability of S-doped BP can be ascribed to the downshift of the conduction band minimum of BP below the redox potential of O/O. Our work suggests that S doping is an effective way to enhance the stability of black phosphorus.
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