Discover the SciOpen Platform and Achieve Your Research Goals with Ease.
Search articles, authors, keywords, DOl and etc.
Achieving minimal subthreshold swing (SS) in transistors is crucial for low-voltage operation and reduced power consumption, however, it remains a challenging issue for conventional metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors due to the complex dielectric engineering. Here, a gate-dielectric free junction field-effect transistor (JFET) is designed based on Te/ZnO van der Waals heterojunction, which exhibits remarkable p-n diode characteristics with a rectifying ratio exceeding 106. By using Te as the gate and ZnO as the channel, the Te/ZnO device demonstrates excellent JFET properties including an on/off ratio of 106, gate leakage current as low as 800 fA, a small pinch-off voltage VP of −0.31 V, and a minimum sub-threshold swing of 65 mV·dec−1, nearly approaching the theoretical limit of 60 mV·dec−1. Under 375-nm laser illumination, the Te/ZnO JFET achieves a high responsivity of 160 A·W−1 and detectivity of 9 × 1011 Jones. Furthermore, a logic inverter is successfully demonstrated with a high gain of 35 and an ultralow power consumption of 6.5 nW. This finding offers a promising pathway to low-power and high-performance electronic applications.

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Comments on this article