| Literature DB >> 12618786 |
Ali Javey1, Hyoungsub Kim, Markus Brink, Qian Wang, Ant Ural, Jing Guo, Paul McIntyre, Paul McEuen, Mark Lundstrom, Hongjie Dai.
Abstract
The integration of materials having a high dielectric constant (high-kappa) into carbon-nanotube transistors promises to push the performance limit for molecular electronics. Here, high-kappa (approximately 25) zirconium oxide thin-films (approximately 8 nm) are formed on top of individual single-walled carbon nanotubes by atomic-layer deposition and used as gate dielectrics for nanotube field-effect transistors. The p-type transistors exhibit subthreshold swings of S approximately 70 mV per decade, approaching the room-temperature theoretical limit for field-effect transistors. Key transistor performance parameters, transconductance and carrier mobility reach 6,000 S x m(-1) (12 microS per tube) and 3,000 cm2 x V(-1) x s(-1) respectively. N-type field-effect transistors obtained by annealing the devices in hydrogen exhibit S approximately 90 mV per decade. High voltage gains of up to 60 are obtained for complementary nanotube-based inverters. The atomic-layer deposition process affords gate insulators with high capacitance while being chemically benign to nanotubes, a key to the integration of advanced dielectrics into molecular electronics.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12618786 DOI: 10.1038/nmat769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841