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Orbital Gating Driven by Giant Stark Effect in Tunneling Phototransistors

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

Eun-Ah Kim
G. Hwang
D. Kim
D. Won
Y. Joo
S. Zheng
K. Watanabe
T. Taniguchi
P. Moon
D.-W. Kim
L. Sun
H. Yang

Abstract

Conventional gating in transistors uses electric fields through external dielectrics that require complex fabrication processes. Various optoelectronic devices deploy photogating by electric fields from trapped charges in neighbor nanoparticles or dielectrics under light illumination. Orbital gating driven by giant Stark effect is demonstrated in tunneling phototransistors based on 2H-MoTe2 without using external gating bias or slow charge trapping dynamics in photogating. The original self-gating by light illumination modulates the interlayer potential gradient by switching on and off the giant Stark effect where the dz2-orbitals of molybdenum atoms play the dominant role. The orbital gating shifts the electronic bands of the top atomic layer of the MoTe2 by up to 100 meV, which is equivalent to modulation of a carrier density of 7.3 × 1011 cm–2 by electrical gating. Suppressing conventional photoconductivity, the orbital gating in tunneling phototransistors achieves low dark current, practical photoresponsivity (3357 AW–1), and fast switching time (0.5 ms) simultaneously. © 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH

Date Published

Journal

Advanced Materials

Volume

34

Issue

6

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85124724226&doi=10.1002%2fadma.202106625&partnerID=40&md5=775b313be7b36eb1ca88ee243de58b2d

DOI

10.1002/adma.202106625

Group (Lab)

Funding Source

SRFC‐MA1701‐01
12074260
19ZR1436400
2021M3H4A1A03054856
NRF‐2020R1I1A1A01067910
Z210006

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