Title: Nanoelectronic Devices
1Nanoelectronic Devices
Gregory L. Snider Department of Electrical
Engineering University of Notre Dame
2What are Nanoelectronic Devices?
- A rough definition is a device where
- The wave nature of electrons plays a significant
(dominant) role. - The quantized nature of charge plays a
significant role.
3Examples
- Quantum point contacts (QPC)
- Resonant tunneling diodes (RTD)
- Single-electron devices
- Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA)
- Molecular electronics (sometimes not truly nano)
4References
- Single Charge Tunneling, H. Grabet and M.
Devoret, Plenum Press, New York, 1992 - Modern Semiconductor Devices, S.M. Sze, John
Wiley and Sons, New York, 1998 - Theory of Modern Electronic Semiconductor
Devices, K. Brennan and A. Brown, John Wiley and
Sons, New York, 2002 - Quantum Semiconductor Structures, Fundamentals
and Applications , C. Weisbuch and B. Vinter,
Academic Press, Inc., San Diego, 1991
5When does Quantum Mechanics Play a Role?
W V, pg. 12, Fig. 5
6More Realistic Confinement
W V, pg. 13, Fig.6
7Quantum Point Contacts
One of the earliest nanoelectronic devices QPCs
depend on ballistic, wave-like transport of
carriers through a constriction.
In the first demonstration surface split- gates
are used to deplete a 2D electron gas. The
confinement in the constriction produces subbands.
8Quantized Conductance
When a bias is applied from source to drain
electrons travel ballisticly. Each
spin-degenerate subband can provide 2e2/h of
conductance.
Va Wees, PRL 60, p. 848, 1988
9What About Temperature?
Thermal energy is the bane of all nanoelectronic
devices.
T2 gt T1
As the temperature increases more subbands become
occupied, washing out the quantized conductance.
All nanoelectronic devices have a characteristic
energy that must be larger than kT
10Resonant Tunnel Devices
In a finite well the wavefunction penetrates into
the walls, which is tunneling
In the barrier
where
Transmission through a single barrier goes as
11Two Barriers
Semiclassically a particle in the well oscillates
with
It can tunnel out giving a lifetime tn and
Now make a particle incident on the double
barrier
If Ei ? En then T T1T2 which is small
12If Ei En then the wavefunction builds in the
well, as in a Fabry-Perot resonator
Which approaches unity for T1 T2
13In Real Life!
Things are, of course, more complicated - No
mono-energetic injection - Other degrees of
freedom
In the well
In the leads
14In k Space No One Can Hear You Scream!
For Transmission
To get through the barriers electrons must have E
gt Ec but must also have the correct kz. Only
states on the disk meet these criteria.
15J is proportional to the number of states on the
disk, and therefore to the area of the disk
Note we have ignored the transmission probability
16Scattering
Scattering plays an important but harmful role,
mixing in-plane and perpendicular states
BB p236
17Single Electron Devices
The most basic single-electron device is a single
island connected to a lead through a tunnel
junction
If EC gt kT then the electron population on the
island will be stable. Usually we want Ec gt 3-10
times kT. For room temperature operation this
means C 1 aF.
18If the temperature is too high, the electrons can
hop on and off the island with just the thermal
energy. This is uncontrollable.
19What is an Island?
- Anywhere that an electron wants to sit can be
used as an island - Metals
- Semiconductors
- Quantum dots
- Electrostatic confinement
20Single Electron Box
The energy of the configuration with n electrons
on the island is
Q Cs U
21At a charge Q/e of 0.5 one more electron is
abruptly added to the island.
What does it mean to have a charge of 1/2 and
electron?
22Single - Electron Transistor (SET)
When U0, no current flows.
Coulomb Blockade
When (CGU)/e 0.5 current flows.
Why?
One more electron is allowed on the island.
23These are called Coulomb blockade peaks.
Is the peak the current of only one electron
flowing through the island?
No, but they flow through one at a time!
24What about Temperature?
GD p181
As the temperature increases the peaks stay about
the same, while the valleys no longer go to zero.
This is the loss of Coulomb blockade. Finally
the peaks smear out entirely.
This shows the classical regime, such as for
metal dots. In semiconductor dots resonant can
cause an increase in the conductance at low
temperatures (the peak values increase).
25SET Stability Diagram
You can also break the Coulomb blockade by
applying a large drain voltage.
26Ultra-sensitive electrometers
Dot Signal
Add an electron
Lose an electron
Sensitivity can be as high as 10-6 e/sqrt(Hz)
27Single Electron Trap
GD p123
This non-reversible device can be used to store
information.
28Single Electron Turnstile
GD p124
This is an extension of the single electron trap
that can move electrons one at at time
29Turnstile Operation
Why does it need to be non-reversible?
GD page 125
Can this be used as a current standard?
Issues Co-tunneling Missed transitions Thermal
ly activated events
30Single Electron Pump
Here there are two coupled boxes, and an electron
is moved from one to the other in a reversible
process.
GD p128
Same Issues Missed transitions Thermally
activated events Co-tunneling
31Background charge effect on single electron
devices
e-
- Nanometer scaled movements of charge in
insulators, located either near or in the device
lead to these effects. - This offset charge noise (Q0) limits the
sensitivity of the electrometer.
32Background charge insensitive single electron
memory
- A bit is represented by a few electron charge on
a floating gate. - SET electrometer used as a readout device.
- Random background charge affects only the phase
of the SET oscillations. - The FET amplifier solves the problem of the high
output impedance of the SET transistor.
K. K. Likharev and A. N. Korotkov, Proc. ISDRS95
33Plasma oxide fabrication technique
34Plasma oxide device
- Two step e-beam lithography on PMMA/MMA.
- Oxidation after first step in oxygen plasma
formed by glow discharge. - Oxide thickness characterized by VASE technique.
Ground
SET
BG
FG
CG
- 6 nm of oxide grown after 5 min oxidation in 50
mTorr oxygen plasma at 10 W.
35Hysteresis Loops
- SET conductance monitored on the application of a
bias on the control gate. - A back gate bias cancels the direct effect of the
control gate on the SET. - The change in the operating point of the SET is
due to electrons charging and discharging the
floating gate.
36Zuses paradigm
- Konrad Zuse (1938) Z3 machine
- Use binary numbers to encode information
- Represent binary digits as on/off state of a
current switch
The flow through one switch turns another on or
off.
37Problems shrinking the current-switch
38New paradigm Quantum-dot Cellular Automata
Represent information with charge configuration.
- Zuses paradigm
- Binary
- Current switch
- Revolutionary, not incremental, approach
-
- Beyond transistors requires rethinking circuits
and architectures
39Quantum-dot Cellular Automata
- Represent binary information by charge
configuration
Tunneling between dots
Polarization P 1 Bit value 1
Bistable, nonlinear cell-cell response Restoration
of signal levels Robustness against disorder
Neighboring cells tend to align. Coulombic
coupling
40Variations of QCA cell design
41Clocking in QCA
Keyes and Landauer, IBM Journal of Res. Dev. 14,
152, 1970
1
0
Clock
0
Clock Applied
Input Removed
Small Input Applied
0
but Information is preserved!
42Quasi-Adiabatic Switching
- Clocking Schemes for Nanoelectronics
- Keyes and Landauer, IBM Journal of Res. Dev. 14,
152, 1970 - Lent et al., Physics and Computation Conference,
Nov. 1994 - Likharev and Korotkov, Science 273, 763, 1996
- Requires additional control of cells.
- Introduce a null state with zero polarization
which encodes no information, in contrast to
active state which encodes binary 0 or 1.
Clocking signal should not have to be sent to
individual cells, but to sub-arrays of cells.
43Power Will Be a Limiter
- Microprocessor power continues to increase
exponentially
100000
10000
Transition from NMOS to CMOS
1000
Power (Watts)
Pentium
100
P6
286
486
10
8086
386
8080
8008
8085
1
4004
0.1
1971
1974
1978
1985
1992
2000
2004
2008
- Power delivery and dissipation will be
prohibitive !
Slide author Mary Jane Irwin, Penn State
University
Source Borkar De, Intel?
44Power Density will Increase
10000
1000
Power Density (W/cm2)
100
8086
10
P6
8008
Pentium
8085
4004
386
286
486
8080
1
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
- Power densities too high to keep junctions at low
temps
Slide author Mary Jane Irwin, Penn State
University
Source Borkar De, Intel?
45QCA power dissipation
QCA architectures can operate at densities above
1011 devices/cm2 without melting the chip.
46QCA devices
Binary wire
Majority gate
Inverter
Programmable 2-input AND or OR gate.
47Metal-dot QCA implementation
70 mK
dot metal island
48Tunnel junctions by shadow evaporation
Oxidation of aluminum
49Metal-dot QCA cells and devices
Switch Point
Input Double Dot
(1,0)
(0,1)
Top Electrometer
Bottom Electrometer
A.O. Orlov, I. Amlani, G.H. Bernstein, C.S. Lent,
and G.L. Snider, Science, 277, pp. 928-930,
(1997).
50Switching of 4-Dot Cell
51Majority Gate
Amlani, A. Orlov, G. Toth, G. H. Bernstein, C. S.
Lent, G. L. Snider, Science 284, pp. 289-291
(1999).
52QCA Latch Fabrication
53QCA Clocked Latch (Memory)
54QCA Shift Register
55Fan-Out
56From metal-dot to molecular QCA
Metal tunnel junctions
dot metal island
70 mK
57Charge configuration represents bit
HOMO
Gaussian 98 UHF/STO-3G
58Double molecule
Considered as a single cell, bit is represented
by quadrupole moment. Alternatively consider it
a dipole driving another dipole.
59Double molecule
HOMO
Isopotential ()
60Core-cluster molecules
61Core-cluster moleculesTheory of molecular QCA
bistability Allyl group
Variants with feet for surface binding and
orientation
62Electron Switching in QCA
Molecular Dots
Metal Dots
Measure conductance
63Electron Switching Demonstration
Capacitance peaks correspond to click-clack
switching within the molecule
JACS 125, 15250-15259, 2003
64Clocked molecular QCA
65Summary
- QCA may offer a promising paradigm for
nanoelectronics - binary digits represented by charge configuration
- beyond transistors
- general-purpose computing
- enormous functional densities
- solves power issues gain and dissipation
- Scalable to molecular dimensions
- Single electron memories represent the ultimate
scaling