Ali Javey
University of California, Berkeley
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ali Javey.
Nature | 2003
Ali Javey; Jing Guo; Qian Wang; Mark Lundstrom; Hongjie Dai
A common feature of the single-walled carbon-nanotube field-effect transistors fabricated to date has been the presence of a Schottky barrier at the nanotube–metal junctions. These energy barriers severely limit transistor conductance in the ‘ON’ state, and reduce the current delivery capability—a key determinant of device performance. Here we show that contacting semiconducting single-walled nanotubes by palladium, a noble metal with high work function and good wetting interactions with nanotubes, greatly reduces or eliminates the barriers for transport through the valence band of nanotubes. In situ modification of the electrode work function by hydrogen is carried out to shed light on the nature of the contacts. With Pd contacts, the ‘ON’ states of semiconducting nanotubes can behave like ohmically contacted ballistic metallic tubes, exhibiting room-temperature conductance near the ballistic transport limit of 4e2/h (refs 4–6), high current-carrying capability (∼25 µA per tube), and Fabry–Perot interferences at low temperatures. Under high voltage operation, the current saturation appears to be set by backscattering of the charge carriers by optical phonons. High-performance ballistic nanotube field-effect transistors with zero or slightly negative Schottky barriers are thus realized.
Nature Materials | 2009
Zhiyong Fan; Haleh Razavi; Jae-won Do; Aimee Moriwaki; Onur Ergen; Yu-Lun Chueh; Paul W. Leu; Johnny C. Ho; Toshitake Takahashi; Lothar A. Reichertz; Steven L. Neale; Kyoungsik Yu; Ming C. Wu; Joel W. Ager; Ali Javey
Solar energy represents one of the most abundant and yet least harvested sources of renewable energy. In recent years, tremendous progress has been made in developing photovoltaics that can be potentially mass deployed. Of particular interest to cost-effective solar cells is to use novel device structures and materials processing for enabling acceptable efficiencies. In this regard, here, we report the direct growth of highly regular, single-crystalline nanopillar arrays of optically active semiconductors on aluminium substrates that are then configured as solar-cell modules. As an example, we demonstrate a photovoltaic structure that incorporates three-dimensional, single-crystalline n-CdS nanopillars, embedded in polycrystalline thin films of p-CdTe, to enable high absorption of light and efficient collection of the carriers. Through experiments and modelling, we demonstrate the potency of this approach for enabling highly versatile solar modules on both rigid and flexible substrates with enhanced carrier collection efficiency arising from the geometric configuration of the nanopillars.
Nano Letters | 2012
Hui Fang; Steven Chuang; Ting Chia Chang; Kuniharu Takei; Toshitake Takahashi; Ali Javey
We report high performance p-type field-effect transistors based on single layered (thickness, ∼0.7 nm) WSe(2) as the active channel with chemically doped source/drain contacts and high-κ gate dielectrics. The top-gated monolayer transistors exhibit a high effective hole mobility of ∼250 cm(2)/(V s), perfect subthreshold swing of ∼60 mV/dec, and I(ON)/I(OFF) of >10(6) at room temperature. Special attention is given to lowering the contact resistance for hole injection by using high work function Pd contacts along with degenerate surface doping of the contacts by patterned NO(2) chemisorption on WSe(2). The results here present a promising material system and device architecture for p-type monolayer transistors with excellent characteristics.
Nature Materials | 2010
Kuniharu Takei; Toshitake Takahashi; Johnny C. Ho; Hyunhyub Ko; Andrew G. Gillies; Paul W. Leu; Ronald S. Fearing; Ali Javey
Large-scale integration of high-performance electronic components on mechanically flexible substrates may enable new applications in electronics, sensing and energy. Over the past several years, tremendous progress in the printing and transfer of single-crystalline, inorganic micro- and nanostructures on plastic substrates has been achieved through various process schemes. For instance, contact printing of parallel arrays of semiconductor nanowires (NWs) has been explored as a versatile route to enable fabrication of high-performance, bendable transistors and sensors. However, truly macroscale integration of ordered NW circuitry has not yet been demonstrated, with the largest-scale active systems being of the order of 1 cm(2) (refs 11,15). This limitation is in part due to assembly- and processing-related obstacles, although larger-scale integration has been demonstrated for randomly oriented NWs (ref. 16). Driven by this challenge, here we demonstrate macroscale (7×7 cm(2)) integration of parallel NW arrays as the active-matrix backplane of a flexible pressure-sensor array (18×19 pixels). The integrated sensor array effectively functions as an artificial electronic skin, capable of monitoring applied pressure profiles with high spatial resolution. The active-matrix circuitry operates at a low operating voltage of less than 5 V and exhibits superb mechanical robustness and reliability, without performance degradation on bending to small radii of curvature (2.5 mm) for over 2,000 bending cycles. This work presents the largest integration of ordered NW-array active components, and demonstrates a model platform for future integration of nanomaterials for practical applications.
Nature | 2016
Wei Gao; Sam Emaminejad; Hnin Yin Yin Nyein; Samyuktha Challa; Kevin S. Chen; Austin Peck; Hossain M. Fahad; Hiroki Ota; Hiroshi Shiraki; Daisuke Kiriya; Der-Hsien Lien; George A. Brooks; Ronald W. Davis; Ali Javey
Wearable sensor technologies are essential to the realization of personalized medicine through continuously monitoring an individual’s state of health. Sampling human sweat, which is rich in physiological information, could enable non-invasive monitoring. Previously reported sweat-based and other non-invasive biosensors either can only monitor a single analyte at a time or lack on-site signal processing circuitry and sensor calibration mechanisms for accurate analysis of the physiological state. Given the complexity of sweat secretion, simultaneous and multiplexed screening of target biomarkers is critical and requires full system integration to ensure the accuracy of measurements. Here we present a mechanically flexible and fully integrated (that is, no external analysis is needed) sensor array for multiplexed in situ perspiration analysis, which simultaneously and selectively measures sweat metabolites (such as glucose and lactate) and electrolytes (such as sodium and potassium ions), as well as the skin temperature (to calibrate the response of the sensors). Our work bridges the technological gap between signal transduction, conditioning (amplification and filtering), processing and wireless transmission in wearable biosensors by merging plastic-based sensors that interface with the skin with silicon integrated circuits consolidated on a flexible circuit board for complex signal processing. This application could not have been realized using either of these technologies alone owing to their respective inherent limitations. The wearable system is used to measure the detailed sweat profile of human subjects engaged in prolonged indoor and outdoor physical activities, and to make a real-time assessment of the physiological state of the subjects. This platform enables a wide range of personalized diagnostic and physiological monitoring applications.
Nature Materials | 2013
Chuan Wang; David Hwang; Zhibin Yu; Kuniharu Takei; Junwoo Park; Teresa Chen; Biwu Ma; Ali Javey
Electronic skin (e-skin) presents a network of mechanically flexible sensors that can conformally wrap irregular surfaces and spatially map and quantify various stimuli. Previous works on e-skin have focused on the optimization of pressure sensors interfaced with an electronic readout, whereas user interfaces based on a human-readable output were not explored. Here, we report the first user-interactive e-skin that not only spatially maps the applied pressure but also provides an instantaneous visual response through a built-in active-matrix organic light-emitting diode display with red, green and blue pixels. In this system, organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are turned on locally where the surface is touched, and the intensity of the emitted light quantifies the magnitude of the applied pressure. This work represents a system-on-plastic demonstration where three distinct electronic components--thin-film transistor, pressure sensor and OLED arrays--are monolithically integrated over large areas on a single plastic substrate. The reported e-skin may find a wide range of applications in interactive input/control devices, smart wallpapers, robotics and medical/health monitoring devices.
Nano Letters | 2004
Ali Javey; Jing Guo; Damon B. Farmer; Qian Wang; Erhan Yenilmez; Roy G. Gordon; Mark Lundstrom; Hongjie Dai; Stanford Uni
Carbon nanotube field-effect transistors with structures and properties near the scaling limit with short (down to 50 nm) channels, self-aligned geometries, palladium electrodes with low contact resistance, and high-K dielectric gate insulators are realized. Electrical transport in these miniature transistors is nearly ballistic up to high biases at both room and low temperatures. Atomic-layer-deposited (ALD) high-K films interact with nanotube sidewalls via van der Waals interactions without causing weak localization at 4 K. New fundamental understanding of ballistic transport, optical phonon scattering, and potential interfacial scattering mechanisms in nanotubes is obtained. Also, parallel arrays of such molecular transistors are enabled to deliver macroscopic currents-an important milestone for future circuit applications.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Hui Fang; Corsin Battaglia; Carlo Carraro; Slavomír Nemšák; Burak Ozdol; Jeong Seuk Kang; Hans A. Bechtel; Sujay B. Desai; Florian Kronast; Ahmet A. Ünal; Giuseppina Conti; Catherine Conlon; Gunnar K. Palsson; Michael C. Martin; Andrew M. Minor; C. S. Fadley; Eli Yablonovitch; Roya Maboudian; Ali Javey
Significance A new class of heterostructures consisting of layered transition metal dichalcogenide components can be designed and built by van der Waals (vdW) stacking of individual monolayers into functional multilayer structures. Nonetheless, the optoelectronic properties of this new type of vdW heterostructure are unknown. Here, we investigate artificial semiconductor heterostructures built from single-layer WSe2 and MoS2. We observe spatially direct absorption but spatially indirect emission in this heterostructure, with strong interlayer coupling of charge carriers. The coupling at the hetero-interface can be readily tuned by inserting hexagonal BN dielectric layers into the vdW gap. The generic nature of this interlayer coupling is expected to yield a new family of semiconductor heterostructures having tunable optoelectronic properties through customized composite layers. Semiconductor heterostructures are the fundamental platform for many important device applications such as lasers, light-emitting diodes, solar cells, and high-electron-mobility transistors. Analogous to traditional heterostructures, layered transition metal dichalcogenide heterostructures can be designed and built by assembling individual single layers into functional multilayer structures, but in principle with atomically sharp interfaces, no interdiffusion of atoms, digitally controlled layered components, and no lattice parameter constraints. Nonetheless, the optoelectronic behavior of this new type of van der Waals (vdW) semiconductor heterostructure is unknown at the single-layer limit. Specifically, it is experimentally unknown whether the optical transitions will be spatially direct or indirect in such hetero-bilayers. Here, we investigate artificial semiconductor heterostructures built from single-layer WSe2 and MoS2. We observe a large Stokes-like shift of ∼100 meV between the photoluminescence peak and the lowest absorption peak that is consistent with a type II band alignment having spatially direct absorption but spatially indirect emission. Notably, the photoluminescence intensity of this spatially indirect transition is strong, suggesting strong interlayer coupling of charge carriers. This coupling at the hetero-interface can be readily tuned by inserting dielectric layers into the vdW gap, consisting of hexagonal BN. Consequently, the generic nature of this interlayer coupling provides a new degree of freedom in band engineering and is expected to yield a new family of semiconductor heterostructures having tunable optoelectronic properties with customized composite layers.
Nano Letters | 2005
Ali Javey; Ryan Tu; Damon B. Farmer; Jing Guo; Roy G. Gordon; Hongjie Dai
Short channel ( approximately 80 nm) n-type single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) field-effect transistors (FETs) with potassium (K) doped source and drain regions and high-kappa gate dielectrics (ALD HfO(2)) are obtained. For nanotubes with diameter approximately 1.6 nm and band gap approximately 0.55 eV, we obtain n-MOSFET-like devices exhibiting high on-currents due to chemically suppressed Schottky barriers at the contacts, subthreshold swing of 70 mV/decade, negligible ambipolar conduction, and high on/off ratios up to 10(6) at a bias voltage of 0.5 V. The results compare favorably with the state-of-the-art silicon n-MOSFETs and demonstrate the potential of SWNTs for future complementary electronics. The effects of doping level on the electrical characteristics of the nanotube devices are discussed.
Physical Review Letters | 2004
Ali Javey; Jing Guo; Magnus Paulsson; Qian Wang; David Mann; Mark Lundstrom; Hongjie Dai
Single walled carbon nanotubes with Pd Ohmic contacts and lengths ranging from several microns down to 10 nm are investigated by electron transport experiments and theory. The mean-free path (MFP) for acoustic phonon scattering is estimated to be l(ap) approximately 300 nm, and that for optical phonon scattering is l(op) approximately 15 nm. Transport through very short (approximately 10 nm) nanotubes is free of significant acoustic and optical phonon scattering and thus ballistic and quasiballistic at the low- and high-bias voltage limits, respectively. High currents of up to 70 microA can flow through a short nanotube. Possible mechanisms for the eventual electrical breakdown of short nanotubes at high fields are discussed. The results presented here have important implications to high performance nanotube transistors and interconnects.