Hysteresis Caused by Water Molecules in Carbon Nanotube Field-Effect Transistors
Abstract
Carbon nanotube field-effect transistors commonly comprise nanotubes lying on SiO2 surfaces exposed to the ambient environment. It is shown here that the transistors exhibit hysteresis in their electrical characteristics because of charge trapping by water molecules around the nanotubes, including SiO2 surface-bound water proximal to the nanotubes. Hysteresis persists for the transistors in vacuum since the SiO2-bound water does not completely desorb in vacuum at room temperature, a known phenomenon in SiO2 surface chemistry. Heating under dry conditions significantly removes water and reduces hysteresis in the transistors. Nearly hysteresis-free transistors are obtainable by passivating the devices with…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
6- WKWoong KimCorresponding
Stanford University
- AJAli Javey
Stanford University
- OVOphir Vermesh
Stanford University
- QWQian Wang
Stanford University
- YLYiming Li
Stanford University
Topics & keywords
- Carbon nanotube
- Materials science
- Hysteresis
- Transistor
- Field-effect transistor
- Nanotechnology
- Nanotube
- Optoelectronics
- Clean water and sanitation