Title: Single-Crystal Antimonene Films Prepared by Molecular Beam Epitaxy: Selective Growth and Contact Resistance Reduction of the 2D Material Heterostructure
Authors: Chen, Hsuan-An
Sun, Hsu
Wu, Chong-Rong
Wang, Yu-Xuan
Lee, Po-Hsiang
Pao, Chun-Wei
Lin, Shih-Yen
照明與能源光電研究所
Institute of Lighting and Energy Photonics
Keywords: antimonene;conducting 2D materials;2D material heterostructures;contact resistance;transistors
Issue Date: 2-May-2018
Abstract: Single-crystal antimonene flakes are observed on sapphire substrates after the postgrowth annealing procedure of amorphous antimony (Sb) droplets prepared by using molecular beam epitaxy at room temperature. The large wetting angles of the antimonene flakes to the sapphire substrate suggest that an alternate substrate should be adopted to obtain a continuous antimonene film. By using a bilayer MoS2/sapphire sample as the new substrate, a continuous and single-crystal antimonene film is obtained at a low growth temperature of 200 degrees C. The results are consistent with the theoretical prediction of the lower interface energy between antimonene and MoS2. The different interface energies of antimonene between sapphire and MoS2 surfaces lead to the selective growth of antimonene only atop MoS2 surfaces on a prepatterned MoS2/sapphire substrate. With similar sheet resistance to graphene, it is possible to use antimonene as the contact metal of 2D material devices. Compared with Au/Ti electrodes, a specific contact resistance reduction up to 3 orders of magnitude is observed by using the multilayer antimonene as the contact metal to MoS2. The lower contact resistance, the lower growth temperature, and the preferential growth to other 2D materials have made antimonene a promising candidate as the contact metal for 2D material devices.
URI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.8b02394
http://hdl.handle.net/11536/144957
ISSN: 1944-8244
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b02394
Journal: ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume: 10
Begin Page: 15058
End Page: 15064
Appears in Collections:Articles