posted on 2024-12-27, 03:11authored byKyungmin Ko, Jing Huang, Jaeeun Kwon, Mingyu Jang, Hanbin Cho, Seonguk Yang, Sungyeon Kim, Sangwoo Park, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe, Der-Yuh Lin, Swati Singh, Dong-Hyeok Lim, Seth Ariel Tongay, Jun Kang, Joonki Suh
With reduced dimensionality and a high surface area-to-volume
ratio,
two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors exhibit intriguing electronic
properties that are exceptionally sensitive to surrounding environments,
including directly interfacing gate dielectrics. These influences
are tightly correlated to their inherent behavior, making it critical
to examine when extrinsic charge carriers are intentionally introduced
to the channel for complementary functionality. This study explores
the physical origin of the competitive transition between intrinsic
and extrinsic charge carrier conduction in extrinsically p-doped MoS2, highlighting the central role of interactions
of the channel with amorphous gate dielectrics. By providing a pristine
interface to the channel and controlling the degree of such interaction
using hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) spacers of different thicknesses,
we determined three distinctive interaction modes: noncontact, proximity,
and direct-contact. In the direct-contact mode without an h-BN spacer,
charge transfer and orbital mixing induce ambipolar conduction in
few-layer p-doped MoS2, showing an unexpected
gate-dependent crossover between coexisting extrinsic and intrinsic
conduction. Kelvin probe force microscopy and Raman spectroscopy confirm n-type doping in the channel through dielectric interactions,
further supported by first-principles calculations identifying unpassivated
silicon dangling bonds on the SiO2 surface as the origin
of n-doping. On the contrary, depending on the thickness
of the h-BN spacers, the noncontact mode maintains degenerate p-type conduction in the transfer curve, while the proximity
mode enables gate-responsive p-type conduction, emphasizing
the significant role of dielectric interactions in modulating charge
transport. These findings underscore the importance of dielectric
engineering in optimizing 2D semiconductor devices, particularly for
improving the p-type transistor performance.