Abstract
In the pursuit of ultrathin and highly sensitive photodetectors, a promising approach involves leveraging the combination of light-sensitive two-dimensional (2D) semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides, such as MoS2 and the high electrical conductivity of graphene. Over the past decade, exfoliated 2D materials and electron-beam lithography have been used extensively to demonstrate feasibility on single devices. But for these devices to be used in the real-world systems, it is necessary to demonstrate good device performance similar to lab-based devices with repeatability of the results from device to device and a path to large scale manufacturing. To work in this way, a fabrication process of MoS2/graphene vertical heterostructures with a wafer-scale integration in a CMOS compatible foundry environment is evaluated here. Large-scale atomic layer deposition on 8 inch silicon wafers is used for the growth of MoS2 layers which are then transferred on a 4 inch graphene-based wafer. The MoS2/graphene phototransistors are fabricated collectively, achieving a minimum channel length of 10 μm. The results measured on dozen of devices demonstrate a photoresponsivity of 50 A W−1 and a remarkable sensitivity as low as 10 nW at 660 nm. These results not only compete with lab-based photodetectors made of chemical vapor deposition grown MoS2 layers transferred on graphene, but also pave the way for the large-scale integration of these emerging 2D heterostructures in optoelectronic devices and sensors.
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