Two-dimensional (2D) materials with exotic transport behaviors have attracted extensive interest in microelectronics and condensed matter physics, while scaled-up 2D thin films compatible with the efficient wet-chemical etching process represent realistic advancement toward new-generation integrated functional devices. Here, thickness-controllable growth and chemical patterning of high-quality BiOTe continuous films are demonstrated. Noticeably, except for an ultrahigh mobility (∼45074 cm V s at 2 K) and obvious Shubnikov-de Hass quantum oscillations, a 2D transport channel and large linear magnetoresistance are revealed in the patterned BiOTe films. Investigation implies that the linear magnetoresistance correlates with the inhomogeneity described by 's theory and EMT-RRN theory developed recently. These results not only reveal the nonsaturating linear magnetoresistance in high-quality BiOTe but shed light on understanding the corresponding physical origin of linear magnetoresistance in 2D high-mobility semiconductors and providing a pathway for the potential application in multifunctional electronic devices.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c03645 | DOI Listing |
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