TY - JOUR
T1 - PtSe2phototransistors with negative photoconductivity
AU - Di Bartolomeo, A.
AU - Urban, F.
AU - Faella, E.
AU - Grillo, A.
AU - Pelella, A.
AU - Giubileo, F.
AU - Askari, M. B.
AU - McEvoy, N.
AU - Gity, F.
AU - Hurley, P. K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2021/4/27
Y1 - 2021/4/27
N2 - Platinum diselenide (PtSe2) is one of the most studied materials of the emerging group-10 transition-metal dichalcogenides. We investigate the electrical conduction and the photoconduction of PtSe2 ultrathin films exploited as the channel of back-gated field-effect transistors. The channel resistance decreases with the rising temperature and shows that the films have semiconducting behaviour. The gate modulation confirms a p-type conductivity with field-effect mobility up to 30 cm2/(Vs). Under exposure to the radiation from a super-continuous white light source, a reduction of the PtSe2 electrical conductivity (negative photoconductivity) is observed in low vacuum, while a positive photoconductivity emerges only under high-power illumination conditions. Although, the positive photoconductivity arises from conventional photoconductive effect, the negative photoconductivity can be explained as the combination of the photogating effect caused by charge accumulation in the SiO2 dielectric and the photo-induced desorption of adsorbates.
AB - Platinum diselenide (PtSe2) is one of the most studied materials of the emerging group-10 transition-metal dichalcogenides. We investigate the electrical conduction and the photoconduction of PtSe2 ultrathin films exploited as the channel of back-gated field-effect transistors. The channel resistance decreases with the rising temperature and shows that the films have semiconducting behaviour. The gate modulation confirms a p-type conductivity with field-effect mobility up to 30 cm2/(Vs). Under exposure to the radiation from a super-continuous white light source, a reduction of the PtSe2 electrical conductivity (negative photoconductivity) is observed in low vacuum, while a positive photoconductivity emerges only under high-power illumination conditions. Although, the positive photoconductivity arises from conventional photoconductive effect, the negative photoconductivity can be explained as the combination of the photogating effect caused by charge accumulation in the SiO2 dielectric and the photo-induced desorption of adsorbates.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85105596652
U2 - 10.1088/1742-6596/1866/1/012001
DO - 10.1088/1742-6596/1866/1/012001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85105596652
SN - 1742-6588
VL - 1866
JO - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
JF - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
IS - 1
M1 - 012001
T2 - 3rd European Conference on Smart NanoMaterials: Advances, Innovation and Applications Summit, SNAIA 2020
Y2 - 8 December 2020 through 11 December 2020
ER -