Ultra-High Sensitive NO2 Gas Sensor Based on Tunable Polarity Transport in CVD-WS2/IGZO p-N Heterojunction

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

Hongyu Tang (Changzhou Institute of Technology Research for Solid State Lighting, TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials, Tsinghua University)

Yutao Li (Tsinghua University)

Robert Sokolovskij (TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials, Southern University of Science and Technology )

Leandro Sacco (TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials)

Hongze Zheng (Southern University of Science and Technology )

Huaiyu Ye (Shenzhen Institute of Wide-bandgap Semiconductors, Southern University of Science and Technology )

Hongyu Yu (Southern University of Science and Technology )

Xuejun Fan (Lamar University)

Guoqi Zhang (TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials)

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Research Group
Electronic Components, Technology and Materials
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.9b13773 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Research Group
Electronic Components, Technology and Materials
Issue number
43
Volume number
11
Pages (from-to)
40850-40859
Downloads counter
329

Abstract

In this work, a thin-film transistor gas sensor based on the p-N heterojunction is fabricated by stacking chemical vapor deposition-grown tungsten disulfide (WS2) with a sputtered indium-gallium-zinc-oxide (IGZO) film. To the best of our knowledge, the present device has the best NO2 gas sensor response compared to all the gas sensors based on transition-metal dichalcogenide materials. The gas-sensing response is investigated under different NO2 concentrations, adopting heterojunction device mode and transistor mode. High sensing response is obtained of p-N diode in the range of 1-300 ppm with values of 230% for 5 ppm and 18 170% for 300 ppm. On the transistor mode, the gas-sensing response can be modulated by the gate bias, and the transistor shows an ultrahigh response after exposure to NO2, with sensitivity values of 6820% for 5 ppm and 499 400% for 300 ppm. Interestingly, the transistor has a typical ambipolar behavior under dry air, while the transistor becomes p-type as the amount of NO2 increases. The assembly of these results demonstrates that the WS2/IGZO device is a promising platform for the NO2-gas detection, and its gas-modulated transistor properties show a potential application in tunable engineering for two-dimensional material heterojunction-based transistor device.