Bulletin of the American Physical Society
91st Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of the APS
Thursday–Saturday, October 24–26, 2024; UNC Charlotte, North Carolina
Session G01: Condensed Matter and Materials II
10:00 AM–12:00 PM,
Friday, October 25, 2024
UNC Charlotte
Room: Cone Center, Cone 111a
Chair: Demitry Farfurnik, North Carolina State University
Abstract: G01.00009 : Charge-Carrier Mobilities in II-VI-Based Organic-Inorganic Hybrid Superlattice Nanostructures*
11:48 AM–12:00 PM
Presenter:
Wanseok Oh
(University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
Authors:
Wanseok Oh
(University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
Yizhou Wang
(University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
Thomas Schmedake
(University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
Yong Zhang
(University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
The Space-Charge-Limited Current (SCLC) measurement is a convenient, simple, yet powerful two-probe electrical technique used to investigate space-charge transport properties, trap density, and energy distribution of carrier trapping states in semiconductors. However, SCLC measurement analysis may be prone to misinterpretation, as the method was originally developed for the conduction mechanism of ions in a vacuum diode. The Mott-Gurney (MG) law is proposed as a more suitable framework for interpreting SCLC behavior in ideal devices, especially for studying charge-carrier mobility through drift currents.
Partial degradation is observed in β-ZnTe(en)0.5 after exposure to chemicals used in the photolithography process, and stencil lithography approach is used to minimize chemical exposures.
The MG-law has been employed in SCLC measurements to determine the carrier mobility of β-ZnTe(en)0.5 along three symmetry axes. Along the organic-inorganic stacking direction (b-axis), the mobilities are on the order of 10-3 cm2/(Vs). In contrast, the mobility in the plane parallel to the inorganic sheets (a- and c-axis) is anisotropic, ranging from 10 to 100 cm2/(Vs).
*DoD grant #W911NF‐23-1‐0215
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