| Literature DB >> 21730640 |
T Shinada1, T Kurosawa, H Nakayama, Y Zhu, M Hori, I Ohdomari.
Abstract
By 2016, transistor device size will be just 10 nm. However, a transistor that is doped at a typical concentration of 10(18) atoms cm(-3) has only one dopant atom in the active channel region. Therefore, it can be predicted that conventional doping methods such as ion implantation and thermal diffusion will not be available ten years from now. We have been developing a single-ion implantation (SII) method that enables us to implant dopant ions one-by-one into semiconductors until the desired number is reached. Here we report a simple but reliable method to control the number of single-dopant atoms by detecting the change in drain current induced by single-ion implantation. The drain current decreases in a stepwise fashion as a result of the clusters of displaced Si atoms created by every single-ion incidence. This result indicates that the single-ion detection method we have developed is capable of detecting single-ion incidence with 100% efficiency. Our method potentially could pave the way to future single-atom devices, including a solid-state quantum computer.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 21730640 DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/19/34/345202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874