Bulletin of the American Physical Society
89th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of the APS
Volume 67, Number 18
Thursday–Saturday, November 3–5, 2022; University of Mississippi, University, MS
Session H04: Device and Materials Characterization
8:30 AM–10:06 AM,
Friday, November 4, 2022
University of Mississippi
Room: Ballroom D
Chair: Gregory Vieira, Rhodes College
Abstract: H04.00002 : Insulator-to-Metal Phase Transition in a Few-Layered 2D Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor*
9:00 AM–9:30 AM
Presenter:
Nihar R Pradhan
(Jackson State University)
Author:
Nihar R Pradhan
(Jackson State University)
Collaboration:
2D-MIT
prediction of Abrahams et al. [PRL 42, 673 (1979)] that a two-dimensional system must be insulating at low temperatures. Thus, the exploration of MITs in 2D layered semiconductors expands the understanding of the underlying physics. Here I will discuss the MIT of few layered 2D semiconducting material such as MoS2, ReS2 and our recently explored MoSe2 field effect transistor under a gate bias (electric field) applied perpendicularly to the layers. Under low applied gate voltage, the conductivity as a function of temperature on these 2D semiconductor shows typical semiconducting behavior and above a critical applied gate voltage (Vc), the conductivity becomes metallic i.e., the conductivity increases continuously as a function of decreasing temperature. Evidence of a metallic state was observed using an applied gate voltage or, equivalently, increasing the density of charge carriers within the 2D channel. We explored the nature of the phase transition using Quantum Phase Transition as well as percolation theory, which I will discuss in detail.
*This work was performed, in part, at the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility, and supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. N. R. P. acknowledged NSF-PREM through NSF-DMR-1826886, HBCU-UP Excellence in research NSF-DMR-1900692. A portion of this work was performed at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, which is supported by the National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreement No. DMR- 1644779 and the State of Florida.
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