Ionic-Electronic Interactions in
Emerging Semiconductors
Prof.
Keehoon Kang
Department
of Materials Science & Engineering, Seoul National University
Seoul,
Republic of Korea 08826
Abstract
Doping has been one of the most essential methods to control charge
carrier concentration in
semiconductors. Excess generation of charge carriers is a
key route for controlling electrical properties of semiconducting materials and
typically accompanies alteration of electronic structure by the introduction of
dopant impurities, both of which have played pivotal roles in making
breakthroughs in inorganic microelectronic and optoelectronic devices both at
research and industrial levels, especially for Si-based technology. Molecular
doping is a facile and effective doping method for various semiconducting
materials since it is relatively non-invasive compared to high-energy
implantation of ionic impurities used in Si. However, there are main challenges
remaining in fully utilising molecular doping in emerging semiconducting
materials such as π-conjugated polymer semiconductors, metal-halide perovskites
and two-dimensional materials due to the difficulties in preventing disorder
effects induced by
dopant ions while maintaining a high carrier
mobility. This talk will introduce our works on revealing ionic effects on the
charge transport and concepts that we have developed to minimizing the
dopant-induced disorder [1, 2, 3] while mitigating current injection and doping
stability issues in electronic devices [4, 5], and finally outline the future
challenges [6] remaining in the field, including dynamic roles of dopants to
fully uncover the potentials
References
[1]
K. Kang, et. al., “2D Coherent Charge Transport in Highly
Ordered Conducting Polymers Doped by Solid State Diffusion”, Nat. Mater., Vol. 15, p. 896, 2016.
[2]
J. Jang, et. al., “Reduced dopant-induced scattering in remote
charge-transfer-doped MoS2 field-effect transistors”, Sci. Adv., Vol. 8, No. 38, p.
eabn3181, 2022.
[3] J. Lee, et. al., “Bulk
Incorporation of Molecular Dopants into Ruddlesden–Popper Organic Metal–Halide
Perovskites for Charge Transfer Doping”, Adv. Funct. Mater., 33, 38, 2302048, 2023.
[4]
Y. Kim, et. al., “Enhanced Charge Injection Properties of Organic
Field-Effect Transistor by Molecular Implantation Doping”, Adv. Mater., Vol. 31, p. 1806697, 2019.
[5]
Y. Kim, et. al., “Highly Stable Contact Doping in Organic
Field Effect Transistors by Dopant‐Blockade Method” Adv. Funct. Mater. (2020) Vo. 30, p. 2000058
[6] Y. Kim, et al., EcoMat, e12406 (2023)
Biography
Education
2012–2017
PhD, Optoelectronics Group, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge.
2011–2012 MSci, Department
of Physics, University of Cambridge, First Class Honours.
2008–2011 B.A., Department
of Physics, University of Cambridge, First Class Honours.
Professional Experience
2022-present Assistant Professor,
Department of Materials Science & Engineering, Seoul National University. 2021-2022
Assistant Professor, Department of Materials Science & Engineering, Yonsei
University.
2017- 2021 Post-doc, Department of
Physics & Astronomy, Seoul National University.