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Silicon Flash > Blog > Innovations > Revolutionizing Electronics: Growing Ultrathin Semiconductors Directly on Devices
Innovations

Revolutionizing Electronics: Growing Ultrathin Semiconductors Directly on Devices

Published August 21, 2025 By Juwan Chacko
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Revolutionizing Electronics: Growing Ultrathin Semiconductors Directly on Devices
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A groundbreaking method has been developed by a team of materials scientists at Rice University to grow ultrathin semiconductors directly onto electronic components. This new approach eliminates the need for transferring fragile 2D films, revolutionizing the integration of advanced materials into next-generation electronics and other high-speed semiconductor technologies.

A team of materials scientists at Rice University has developed a new way to grow ultrathin semiconductors directly onto electronic components.

The method, described in a study published in ACS Applied Electronic Materials, could help streamline the integration of two-dimensional materials into next-generation electronics, neuromorphic computing, and other technologies demanding ultrathin high-speed semiconductors.

The researchers used chemical vapor deposition (CVD) to grow tungsten diselenide, a 2D semiconductor, directly onto patterned gold electrodes. They next demonstrated the approach by building a functional, proof-of-concept transistor. Unlike conventional techniques that require transferring fragile 2D films from one surface to another, the Rice team’s method eliminates the transfer process entirely.

“This is the first demonstration of a transfer-free method to grow 2D devices,” said Sathvik Ajay Iyengar, a doctoral student at Rice and a first author on the study along with Rice doctoral alumnus Lucas Sassi. “This is a solid step toward reducing processing temperatures and making a transfer-free, 2D semiconductor-integration process possible.”

The discovery began with an unexpected observation during a routine experiment.

“We received a sample from a collaborator that had gold markers patterned on it,” Sassi said. “During CVD growth, the 2D material unexpectedly formed predominantly on the gold surface. This surprising result sparked the idea that by deliberately patterning metal contacts, we might be able to guide the growth of 2D semiconductors directly across them.”

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Semiconductors are foundational to modern computing, and as the industry races toward smaller, faster, and more efficient components, integrating higher-performance, atomically thin materials like tungsten diselenide is a growing priority.

Conventional device fabrication requires growing the 2D semiconductor separately, usually at very high temperatures, then transferring it using a series of steps. While 2D materials promise to outperform silicon in certain metrics, turning their lab-scale promise into industry-relevant applications has proven difficult—in large part due to the fragility of the materials during the transfer process.

“The transfer process can degrade the material and damage its performance,” said Iyengar, who is part of Pulickel Ajayan’s research group at Rice.

The Rice team optimized the precursor materials to lower the synthesis temperature of the 2D semiconductor and showed that it grows in a controlled, directional manner.

“Understanding how these 2D semiconductors interact with metals, especially when grown in situ, is really valuable for future device fabrication and scalability,” said Ajayan, Rice’s Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor of Engineering and professor of materials science and nanoengineering.

Using advanced imaging and chemical analysis tools, the team confirmed the method preserves the integrity of the metal contacts, which are vulnerable to damage at high temperatures.

“A lot of our work in this project was focused on proving that the materials system is still intact,” Iyengar said. “We are well-equipped here at Rice to study the chemistry that goes on in this process to a very fine degree. Seeing what happens at the interface between these materials was a great motivator for the research.”

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The success of the method lies in the strong interaction between the metal and the 2D material during growth, Sassi noted.

“The absence of reliable, transfer-free methods for growing 2D semiconductors has been a major barrier to their integration into practical electronics,” he said. “This work could unlock new opportunities for using atomically thin materials in next-generation transistors, solar cells, and other electronic technologies.”

In addition to challenges with the fabrication process, another key hurdle in 2D semiconductor design is electrical contacts’ quality, which entails not just low energy barriers but also stable and enduring performance, scalability, and compatibility with a wide range of materials.

“An in-situ growth approach allows us to combine several strategies for achieving improved contact quality simultaneously,” said Anand Puthirath, a co-corresponding author of the study and a former research scientist at Rice.

The project was sparked by a question raised during a U.S.-India research initiative: Could a semiconductor fabrication process for 2D materials be developed on a limited budget?

“This started through our collaboration with partners in India,” said Iyengar, who is a fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and an inaugural recipient of the Quad Fellowship, a program launched by the governments of the U.S., India, Australia, and Japan to support early career scientists in exploring how science, policy, and diplomacy intersect on the global stage. “It showed how international partnerships can help identify practical constraints and inspire new approaches that work across global research environments.”

Together with a couple of his peers in the Quad Fellowship cohort, Iyengar co-authored an article advocating for “the need for expertise at the intersection of STEM and diplomacy.”

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“Greater engagement between scientists and policymakers is critical to ensure that scientific advancements translate into actionable policies that benefit society as a whole,” Iyengar said. “Materials science is one of the areas of research where international collaboration could prove invaluable, especially given constraints such as the limited supply of critical minerals and supply chain disruptions.”

More information:
Lucas M. Sassi et al, Mechanistic Understanding and Demonstration of Direct Chemical Vapor Deposition of Transition Metal Dichalcogenides Across Metal Contacts, ACS Applied Electronic Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acsaelm.5c00828

Provided by Rice University




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Growing ultrathin semiconductors directly on electronics could eliminate a fragile manufacturing step (2025, August 20)
retrieved 21 August 2025
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TAGGED: Devices, Electronics, growing, revolutionizing, semiconductors, UltraThin
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