1 / 11

Ali Javey, SungWoo Nam, Robin S.Friedman, Hao Yan, and Charles M. Lieber

EE235 Presentation II Layer-by-Layer Assembly of Nanowires for Three-Dimensional, Multifunctional Electronics. Ali Javey, SungWoo Nam, Robin S.Friedman, Hao Yan, and Charles M. Lieber. Ting-Ta Yen. Potential Materials: NWs & CNT.

hea
Télécharger la présentation

Ali Javey, SungWoo Nam, Robin S.Friedman, Hao Yan, and Charles M. Lieber

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EE235 Presentation IILayer-by-Layer Assembly of Nanowires for Three-Dimensional, Multifunctional Electronics Ali Javey, SungWoo Nam, Robin S.Friedman, Hao Yan, and Charles M. Lieber Ting-Ta Yen

  2. Potential Materials: NWs & CNT Semiconductor NWs and CNT are potential materials for future electronic components. They are usually chemically derived single-crystalline nanostructures. Advantage over conventional semiconductors: 1. Enable integration of high-performance device elements onto any substrate. 2. Scaled on-currents and switching speeds are higher than planar Si structures. 3. Intrinsically miniaturized dimensions. 4. Facilitate the continuation of Moore’s law and quest for faster and smaller electronics. 5. Capability of assembling high-performance NW building blocks (3D integrated electronics).

  3. Layer-by-Layer Assembly In planar Si technology, it has been difficult to achieve 3D integrated structures, due in part to materials-related challenges associated with the need of high-temperature process to produce single-crystalline silicon. So…. Monolithic integration of individual and parallel arrays of crystalline NWs as multifunctional and multilayer circuits. 10 addressable vertical layers. Through both “bottom-up” and “top-down” hybrid methodology. Higher temperature materials growth is independent of the low temperature assembly and fabrication steps. How to assemble and control orientation and density at spatially defined locations on the device substrate?

  4. Dry Deposition Strategy Contact printing of NWs from growth substrate to prepatterned chip substrate. Although NWs are grown with random orientation, they are well-aligned by sheer forces during the printing process. 3D NW circuits are fabricated by the iteration of the contact printing, device fabrication, and separation layer deposition steps N times. Low processing temperature required.

  5. Details of Dry Deposition NWs were printed by sliding a growth substrate consisting of a “lawn” of Ge/Si core/shell NWs (d~15nm, l~30μm), against a device substrate (Si/SiO2 or Kapton). Prior to transfer, the device substrate was patterned with a photoresist layer (~500nm) for two purposes: 1. To prevent transfer of particles and low-quality NW material close to the surface of the growth chip 2. To enable selective assembly of the NWs at defined locations The sliding process results in the direct and dry transfer of NWs from the growth substrate to the desired device substrate chip. After transfer, PR is removed in acetone, leaving only patterned NWs, which are well-aligned along the sliding direction.

  6. Single Layer multi-NWs FETs Using printed Ge/Si NW heterostructures (~10nm thick core with ~2μm shell) as channel material. (Ge/Si were congifured as top-gated devices.) NWs are cleanly printed only at lithographically predesigned locations. Contact printed NWs are aligned and uniform across large length scales (~mm scale). NWs are assembled with high density (~4NW/ μm).

  7. Three-Dimensional NW FETs Consisting of 10 layers of Ge/Si multi-NW FETs on a Si substrate. The 3D NW FET structure exhibits consistent layer-to-layer electrical properties with on-currents of ca. 3 mA and maximum transconductance, gm, of ca.1 mS. Vertically stack these layers without performance degradation. On-current can be readily scaled simply by adjusting the device width and NW density.

  8. Integration of Single-NW FETs • Low Ge/Si NW density growth substrates were used for the contact printing step in order to reduce the density of transferred NWs. • Much narrower 1μ width S/D electrodes were used to ensure a high yield of single-NW device. • ION ~10 μA and Vds ~1V. • Scaled Ge/Si NW FETs afford diameter-normalized ION(2.1 mA/ μm) and gm(3.3 mS/ μm) are both better than state-of-the-art planar Si technology.

  9. Multifunctional Circuits Fabricated on flexible plastic substrate (Kapton). Lower layer: PMOS inverters (load + switching FET) Upper layer: floating gate memory elements (FET + floating gate)

  10. Circuit Characteristics • DC inverter characteristics (quasi-DC gain = 3.5) • AC inverter characteristics (gain is greater than unity at 50 MHz) • Hysteresis in current-voltage characteristics of a memory element (large and reproducible hysteresis loop) • Switching characteristics of memory • (writing & erasing operation result in well-defined and nonvolatile ON and OFF states transitions)

  11. Conclusion Ge/Si NW FETs have reproducible high-performance device characteristics within a given device layer. FET characteristics are not affected by sequential stacking. 3D circuitry can be demonstrated on plastic substrates. The ability to assemble reproducibly sequential layers of distinct types of NW-based devices coupled with the breadth of NW building blocks should enable the assembly of increasing complex multilayer and multifunctional 3D electronics in the future. Thank you !

More Related