It is therefore becoming increasingly important to analyze the electronic properties of nanometer scale semiconductors from the quantum mechanical perspective. Due to their atomic thickness, 2D materials (2DMs) are considered to be the best candidates for revealing the quantum mechanical properties when used as semiconducting channel materials in electronic devices, thus representing alternatives to the conventional semiconducting materials such as Si and GaAs. [1] However, the use of 2DMs leads to large contact resistance (R C ) when they are in contact with metallic electrodes, since they form a metallic interface that depends on van der Waals (vdW) bonding, which induces the vdW gap and generates metalinduced gap states, ultimately resulting in Fermi-level pinning (FLP). [2,3] As a result, the electronic mobility of the metal-contacted 2DM based devices is found to be much lower than the theoretically expected value, thus preventing their quantum properties from being observed. Therefore, minimizing the R C of the devices using 2DMs represents the most important challenge for exploring the novel quantum electronic properties of the devices. In this regard, there have been substantial efforts to reduce the R C by using novel contact strategies. [4,5] Clean vdW contacts either by transferring metal/ semimetal electrodes or depositing indium on 2D semiconductors have been proposed to obtain high-quality metal-semiconductor (MS) interfaces without generating metallization induced defects. [6][7][8][9][10][11] High density doping achieved by chemical dopants, substitutional doping, solid oxides, and semimetals has also been utilized to reduce the R C significantly. [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] However, such contacts were typically placed onto the vdW surface of 2D semiconductors resulting in the formation of vdW tunneling barriers as well as the limitation in lateral scaling of the devices. Here, the 1D edge contact methods have been studied intensively as a very suitable technique for achieving a vdW gap-free electrical contact in scaled 2D devices.Edge-contacted 2D devices were first demonstrated for the purpose of suppressing scattering from the surface of 2DMs by encapsulating graphene with 2D hBN. [21] Following this initial report, the 1D edge contact method became more widely employed due to its additional advantages in the operation of 2D devices: the realization of Fermi-level depinning Recent studies have intensively examined 2D materials (2DMs) as promising materials for use in future quantum devices due to their atomic thinness. However, a major limitation occurs when 2DMs are in contact with metals: a van der Waals (vdW) gap is generated at the 2DM-metal interfaces, which induces metal-induced gap states that are responsible for an uncontrollable Schottky barrier (SB), Fermi-level pinning (FLP), and high contact resistance (R C ), thereby substantially lowering the electronic mobility of 2DMbased devices. Here, vdW-gap-free 1D edge contact is reviewed for use in 2D devices with substantially su...