MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL02.08.14 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Synthesis and Chracterization of Single-Grain Epitaxially-Fused PbSe Quantum Dot Superlattices

When and Where

Apr 25, 2024
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Flex Hall C, Level 2, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Alex Abelson1,2,Caroline Qian2,Matt Law2

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory1,University of California, Irvine2

Abstract

Alex Abelson1,2,Caroline Qian2,Matt Law2

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory1,University of California, Irvine2
Epitaxially-fused superlattices of colloidal quantum dots (QD epi-SLs) may exhibit electronic minibands and high-mobility charge transport, but electrical measurements of epi-SLs have been limited to large-area, polycrystalline samples in which superlattice grain boundaries and intragrain defects suppress/obscure miniband effects. In this talk, I will first discuss the synthesis of large-grained PbSe QD SLs, including detailed analysis of their chemical and physical structure. Next, I will discuss the mechanism by which a ligand-capped PbSe QD SL is converted into an epi-SL. Finally, I will present systematic measurements of charge transport in individual, highly-ordered PbSe QD epi-SL grains. One technical challenge in making these devices is the inherent mismatch in using traditional microfabrication techniques to make single-grained devices of air-sensitive materials. Here, we demonstrate the air-free fabrication of microscale field-effect transistors (μ-FETs) with channels consisting of single PbSe QD epi-SL grains (~ 1 -10 µm grain sizes) and analyze charge transport phenomena in these samples. The devices exhibit <i>p</i>-channel or ambipolar transport with a hole mobility as high as 3.5 cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> at 290 K and 6.5 cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> at 170–220 K, one order of magnitude larger than that of previous QD solids. Device hysteresis at higher temperatures makes the true mobility–temperature curve uncertain and evidence for miniband transport inconclusive.

Keywords

electrical properties | metamaterial | quantum dot

Symposium Organizers

Yunping Huang, CU Boulder
Hao Nguyen, University of Washington
Nayon Park, University of Washington
Claudia Pereyra, University of Pennsylvania

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature