Bilayer TMDs for Future FETs: Carrier Dynamics and Device Implications
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Bilayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are promising materials for next-generation field-effect transistors (FETs) due to their atomically thin structure and favorable transport properties. In this study, we employ density functional theory (DFT) to compute the electronic band structures and phonon dispersions of bilayer WS2, WSe2, and MoS2, and the electron-phonon scattering rates using the EPW (electron-phonon Wannier) method. Carrier transport is then investigated within a semiclassical full-band Monte Carlo framework, explicitly including intrinsic electron-phonon scattering, dielectric screening, scattering with hybrid plasmon–phonon interface excitations (IPPs), and scattering with ionized impurities. Freestanding bilayers exhibit the highest mobilities, with hole mobilities reaching 2300 cm2/V·s in WS2 and 1300 cm2/V·s in WSe2. Using hBN as the top gate dielectric preserves or slightly enhances mobility, whereas HfO2 significantly reduces transport due to stronger IPP and remote phonon scattering. Device-level simulations of double-gate FETs indicate that series resistance strongly limits performance, with optimized WSe2 pFETs achieving ON currents of 820 A/m, and a 10% enhancement when hBN replaces HfO2. These results show the direct impact of first-principles electronic structure and scattering physics on device-level transport, underscoring the importance of material properties and the dielectric environment in bilayer TMDs.