Pages

Friday, 24 January 2014

Phosphorene discovery positively impacts 2D electronics

US researchers have made phosphorus into an analogue of graphene, dubbed phosphorene, allowing practical electronic devices made from such two-dimensional materials. Peide Ye at Purdue University, US, and his co-workers show that phosphorene is the first native 2D electron-poor – or p-type – semiconductor. That’s important for making these flat materials into standard complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) logic circuit elements, which Ye’s team has also achieved with phosphorene. ‘For device applications it’s fundamentally better than graphene,’ Ye says. Read more here...
The ridged structure of phosphorene explains the directional electrical performance dependence that Ye's team saw © Peide Ye

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for writing to "Chemical Science"