A team of researchers led by North Carolina State University has found
that stacking materials that are only one atom thick can create
semiconductor junctions that transfer charge efficiently, regardless of
whether the crystalline structure of the materials is mismatched --
lowering the manufacturing cost for a wide variety of semiconductor
devices such as solar cells, lasers and LEDs.
"This work demonstrates that by stacking multiple two-dimensional
(2-D) materials in random ways we can create semiconductor junctions
that are as functional as those with perfect alignment" says Dr. Linyou
Cao, senior author of a paper on the work and an assistant professor of
materials science and engineering at NC State.
"This could make the manufacture of semiconductor devices an order of magnitude less expensive."
For most semiconductor electronic or photonic devices to work, they
need to have a junction, which is where two semiconductor materials are
bound together. For example, in photonic devices like solar cells,
lasers and LEDs, the junction is where photons are converted into
electrons, or vice versa.
All semiconductor junctions rely on efficient charge transfer between
materials, to ensure that current flows smoothly and that a minimum of
energy is lost during the transfer. To do that in conventional
semiconductor junctions, the crystalline structures of both materials
need to match. However, that limits the materials that can be used,
because you need to make sure the crystalline structures are compatible.
And that limited number of material matches restricts the complexity
and range of possible functions for semiconductor junctions.
"But we found that the crystalline structure doesn't matter if you
use atomically thin, 2-D materials," Cao says. "We used molybdenum
sulfide and tungsten sulfide for this experiment, but this is a
fundamental discovery that we think applies to any 2-D semiconductor
material. That means you can use any combination of two or more
semiconductor materials, and you can stack them randomly but still get
efficient charge transfer between the materials."
Currently, creating semiconductor junctions means perfectly matching
crystalline structures between materials -- which requires expensive
equipment, sophisticated processing methods and user expertise. This
manufacturing cost is a major reason why semiconductor devices such as
solar cells, lasers and LEDs remain very expensive. But stacking 2-D
materials doesn't require the crystalline structures to match.
"It's as simple as stacking pieces of paper on top of each other --
it doesn't even matter if the edges of the paper line up," Cao says.
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