Electrical transport measurements on few-layer MX2

POSTER

Abstract

Transition metal dichalcogenides (MX2) have recently been shown to have excellent optical properties, but their intrinsic electrical properties remain undetermined mainly due to a lack of good electrical contacts to these materials, especially at lower temperatures. We investigated a range of device geometries and contact techniques to improve the situation. So far we have achieved ambipolar gating of the linear-response conductance persisting at temperatures down to 4 K with contact resistance for both carrier of around 50 kiloohm at room temperature. Four terminal Hall-bar measurements is also been made to separate the contact resistance, sheet resistivity, carrier density and mobility.

Authors

  • Zaiyao Fei

    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
  • Joe Finney

    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
  • Paul Nguyen

    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
  • Bosong Sun

    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
  • Xiaodong Xu

    • University of Washington
    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
  • David Cobden

    • University of Washington
    • Department of Physics, University of Washington