Pradeep Bhadrachalam1, Ramkumar Subramanian1, Vishva Ray1, Liang-Chieh Ma1, Weichao Wang2, Jiyoung Kim2, Kyeongjae Cho2, Seong Jin Koh1. 1. 1] Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas 76019, USA [2] Nanotechnology Research Center, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas 76019, USA. 2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75080, USA.
Abstract
Fermi-Dirac electron thermal excitation is an intrinsic phenomenon that limits functionality of various electron systems. Efforts to manipulate electron thermal excitation have been successful when the entire system is cooled to cryogenic temperatures, typically <1 K. Here we show that electron thermal excitation can be effectively suppressed at room temperature, and energy-suppressed electrons, whose energy distribution corresponds to an effective electron temperature of ~45 K, can be transported throughout device components without external cooling. This is accomplished using a discrete level of a quantum well, which filters out thermally excited electrons and permits only energy-suppressed electrons to participate in electron transport. The quantum well (~2 nm of Cr2O3) is formed between source (Cr) and tunnelling barrier (SiO2) in a double-barrier-tunnelling-junction structure having a quantum dot as the central island. Cold electron transport is detected from extremely narrow differential conductance peaks in electron tunnelling through CdSe quantum dots, with full widths at half maximum of only ~15 mV at room temperature.
Fermi-Dirac electron thermal excitation is an intrinsic phenomenon that limits functionality of various electron systems. Efforts to manipulate electron thermal excitation have been successful when the entire system is cooled to cryogenic temperatures, typically <1 K. Here we show that electron thermal excitation can be effectively suppressed at room temperature, and energy-suppressed electrons, whose energy distribution corresponds to an effective electron temperature of ~45 K, can be transported throughout device components without external cooling. This is accomplished using a discrete level of a quantum well, which filters out thermally excited electrons and permits only energy-suppressed electrons to participate in electron transport. The quantum well (~2 nm of Cr2O3) is formed between source (Cr) and tunnelling barrier (SiO2) in a double-barrier-tunnelling-junction structure having a quantum dot as the central island. Cold electron transport is detected from extremely narrow differential conductance peaks in electron tunnelling through CdSe quantum dots, with full widths at half maximum of only ~15 mV at room temperature.
At finite temperatures, electrons in solids are thermally excited in accordance with the
Fermi-Dirac distribution. This electron thermal excitation obscures or nullifies many
novel and technologically important phenomena in various electron systems. For example,
it can wipe out the Coulomb blockade in single-electron systems123
and deteriorate the efficiency of spin-valve effect in spintronic systems456. Electron thermal excitation can also significantly degrade the
performance of more mainstream electronic devices. For example, it is the root cause of
excessive power dissipation in complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)
transistors78. These are just a few examples, but the negative
effect of electron thermal excitation prevails in solid-state electron systems in
general. Therefore, if there were a method that could enable manipulation of electron
thermal excitation, a broad range of scientific and technological benefits would be
expected.Previous studies by others have demonstrated that it is possible to suppress electron
thermal excitations, and thereby obtain low-temperature electrons, by utilizing discrete
energy levels present in quantum dots (QDs)91011. If electron
transport is made to occur through a discrete energy level, it can serve as an energy
filter (or thermal filter) as only those electrons whose energies match the discrete
energy level are allowed to participate in the transport. This has been experimentally
demonstrated using double QD systems, in which the first QD adjacent to the source
electrode serves as an energy filter, passing only cold electrons to the second QD91011. In a similar manner, it has also been demonstrated that the
discrete energy levels or superconducting energy gaps can be utilized for quantum
cooling of electron gases through energy-selective electron tunnelling1213141516. Until now, studies have been focused on obtaining
ultralow sub-Kelvin electrons and investigating their novel phenomena when the entire
system is cooled to cryogenic temperatures, typically less than 1 K (refs
9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
14, 15, 16).In this work, we focus the study on much higher temperature regime, the room temperature.
We show that electron thermal excitation can be effectively suppressed at room
temperature and the energy-suppressed electrons, whose energy distribution corresponds
to an effective electron temperature of ~45 K, can be transported
throughout device components without any external cooling. This is demonstrated using a
structure having a sequential arrangement of a source electrode, a quantum well (QW), a
QD and a drain electrode, in which a discrete state of the QW serves as an energy filter
as electrons are transported from the source to the drain. The key aspect of this
approach is that once electrons are filtered by the QW state, they cannot gain energy
because no path exists for electron excitation (except for the phonon absorption that we
will discuss later), and therefore, the electrons remain cold until transported to the
drain. This approach can be used as an effective strategy to circumvent the intrinsic
thermodynamic constraint of electron thermal excitation and may lead to many practical
applications. An example is demonstrated using single-electron transistors (SETs), in
which the use of energy-filtered cold electrons eliminates the need of liquid He cooling
and produces Coulomb staircase and Coulomb oscillations at room temperature.
Results
Cold electron transport at room temperature
We created an energy filtering structure by incorporating a QW into a
double-barrier tunnelling junction (DBTJ) configuration, Fig.
1a. When a voltage bias is applied to the usual DBTJ such that an
energy level of the QD εD is brought close to the
Fermi level μL of the source electrode (Fig. 1a left), electrons can tunnel from the source to the
QD, resulting in a current onset in the I–V
characteristics (Fig. 1a bottom left). At finite
temperatures, however, this current onset is not abrupt because thermally
excited electrons in the source electrode can tunnel to the QD even if
εD is positioned above
μL (red arrow in Fig. 1a
left). This situation changes dramatically if we insert a QW between the source
and tunnelling barrier 1 (Fig. 1a right). In this case,
the electron transport from the QW energy level εW
to the QD energy level εD can occur only if
εD is equal to or lower than
εW (red arrow in Fig. 1a
right)17. If εD is positioned
above εW, the transport will be blocked as there is
no available excitation path (except for the phonon absorption that can occur
when the energy level offset is small, which we will discuss later). This will
produce an abrupt current step where the current onset corresponds to the
alignment of εW and εD
(Fig. 1a bottom right).
Figure 1
Schematic of electron energy filtering for cold electron transport.
(a) Left: the double-barrier tunnel junction (DBTJ) structure. Due to
the Fermi-Dirac thermal excitation, electron tunnelling can occur (red
arrow) even if QD energy level εD is not
perfectly aligned with the source Fermi level
μL, resulting in broadened current onset in the
I–V, bottom left. The broadening Δ of
the current step increases with temperature. The light-coloured shades near
the Fermi levels μL and
μR schematically represent the Fermi-Dirac
thermal smearing in the electrodes. (a) Right: DBTJ structure with a
quantum well inserted between the source and tunnelling barrier 1. A
discrete energy level formed in the QW serves as an energy filter for
electron injection to the QD. The current onset occurs when the QD energy
level εD aligns with the QW energy level
εW, resulting in a sharp current jump in the
I–V, bottom right. The QW formed on the drain
side does not contribute to the energy filtering, as under the condition
εD>μR,
electrons in the QD will tunnel out to the drain anyway without regard to
the presence of QW in the drain side. For simplicity, the schematic does not
include the QW on the drain side. (b) Schematic of the DBTJ structure
with the energy filter inserted. Top: cross-sectional view. The dotted
arrows indicate electron tunnelling paths. Bottom: three-dimensional view of
one device unit. The schematics are not to scale.
We formed the QW between the source and tunnelling barrier 1 (SiO2) by using Cr as the source electrode, for which a
thin layer (~2 nm) of Cr2O3 is naturally formed on the
Cr surface and serves as
the QW material (Fig. 1a right). Here the interface
charges and/or interface dipoles at the Cr2O3/SiO2 interface18192021 induce a band bending of the Cr2O3 conduction
band, producing the QW2223242526 (the measured depth of
the QW: 1.1±0.1 eV; see Supplementary Figs 1 and 2 and Supplementary Note 1). We fabricated this
energy structure in a three-dimensional configuration using the procedure
previously reported27 (Fig. 1b). In this
configuration, the electrodes (Cr) are vertically separated by an insulating layer
(SiO2 or
Al2O3), the QD is positioned at the
sidewall of the insulating layer, and the SiO2 between the QD and electrode serves as
the tunnelling barrier. We used CdSe nanoparticles as QDs and investigated the electron
transport through their discrete energy states.Figure 2a shows the I–V
characteristics measured at room temperature for a unit in which a
~7 nm CdSe nanoparticle was used as the QD. Abrupt current jumps
(indicated by arrows) are clearly resolved, which reveals that the energy
filtering and subsequent cold electron transport work extremely well at room
temperature. Each current jump corresponds to the alignment of an energy level
of the CdSe QD with the QW
energy level εW, where s, p and
d represent the first three levels in the conduction band of the
CdSe QD and
h1, h2 and h3 the
first three levels in the valance band. We also see a clear zero-conductance gap
(~2.2 V), which originates from the band gap of the
CdSe QD.
Figure 2
Demonstration of energy-filtered cold electron transport at room
temperature.
(a) I–V characteristics measured at room
temperature. The unit was fabricated with the structure in Fig. 1b and with ~7.0-nm CdSe nanocrystal (nominal size) as
the QD. Arrows indicate abrupt current jumps. Each current jump corresponds
to an alignment of the QW level εW to a discrete
energy level of the CdSe
QD. (b) Numerically calculated
I–V’s under the usual Fermi-Dirac
smearing (no energy filtering) at different temperatures (simulator: SIMON
2.0). The I–V at 45 K reproduces the
room temperature experimental data in a. At room temperature, the
current steps are wiped out due to Fermi-Dirac thermal smearing. The
I–V’s are vertically displaced by
30 nA for clarity. (c) Direct differential conductance
(dI/dV) measurement using the lock-in technique at room
temperature (the measurements in a and c are from different
units). The peaks resulted from the alignment of the QW level
εW to discrete energy levels of the
CdSe QD. The peak
widths are extremely narrow even at room temperature: their full widths at
half maximum (FWHMs) are ~18 mV. s, p,
d and h1, h2,
h3: the first three QD levels in the conduction and
valence band, respectively.
For electron transport without the energy filtering, abrupt current steps can be
obtained only at low temperatures. Figure 2b shows
numerically calculated I–V’s at varying
temperatures in which the Fermi-Dirac thermal excitation governs their
temperature behaviour. We see that the experimental I–V
in Fig. 2a can be achieved only when the temperature is
brought to ~45 K (blue in Fig. 2b),
where thermal excitation is sufficiently suppressed. At room temperature, all
the current steps are wiped out because of Fermi-Dirac thermal excitation (green
in Fig. 2b). Experimentally, electron transport through a
QD in the usual DBTJ was extensively studied by others using scanning tunnelling
spectroscopy (STS)2829303132. We note that their
well-resolved current steps were observed only at low temperatures
(<5 K), most often accompanied by non-thermal broadening
factors, such as optical phonon contributions2829303132333435. For example, the
I–V characteristics obtained for a CdSe QD showed that the broadening
Δ (definition in Fig. 1a) is
~50 mV at 4.5 K (ref. 31). On the other hand, our method led to much more abrupt
current steps even at room temperature; Δ is only
~20 mV at 295 K (Fig.
2a).To further investigate the abrupt current jumps in Fig. 2a,
we carried out independent direct differential conductance (dI/dV)
measurements using the lock-in technique at room temperature (Fig. 2c; the data in Fig. 2a, c are from
different units). We observe well-resolved peaks, each corresponding to the
current step in the I–V measurement in Fig. 2a. The peak widths in Fig. 2c are
extremely narrow; the full widths at half maximum (FWHMs) of the peaks are only
~18 mV. Were the usual Fermi-Dirac thermal smearing in
effect, the same FWHMs could have been obtained only when the temperature were
lowered to ~45 K.
Temperature dependance
To investigate the effect of temperature on the energy filtering, we carried out
differential conductance measurements (using lock-in) at varying reservoir
temperatures, ranging from 77 to 295 K. Figure
3a displays differential conductances obtained from a unit in which
an ~7-nm CdSe
nanoparticle was used as the QD. We find that the peak widths decrease as the
temperature is lowered; the FWHMs are ~16, ~10,
~7 and ~3 mV at 295, 225, 150 and
77 K, respectively. At each temperature, the peak widths are the same
for all s, p and d peaks.
Figure 3
Effectiveness of the energy filtering manifested in narrow
dI/dV peak widths at different temperatures.
(a) dI/dV’s at different temperatures for
~7.0 nm CdSe QD. The first three energy levels (labelled as
s, p and d) in the QD conduction band are shown.
(b) dI/dV’s at different temperatures
for ~5.5 nm CdSe QD. The first two energy levels (s and
p) in the QD conduction band are shown. Note that the voltage
scales are different for a and b. For each measurement in
a and b, there was a slight shift of peak positions
(<15 mV) because of the background charge331 (the relative peak separations remained the same). We
have shifted the peak positions so that all the s peaks are aligned
to the s peak of 77 K. The 7.0 nm and
5.5 nm in a and b are the nominal diameters of the
CdSe QD colloids.
(c) Comparison of the peak widths. Green: room temperature
measurement from this study (the s peak at 295 K in
b). Red: STS measurement of a CdSe QD at 4.9 K by Jdira et al.33
E: electron energy; εs: energy of QD
s-level. (d) FWHMs of the dI/dV peaks at
different temperatures. Red: STS measurements by Jdira et al.33; the error bars represent standard deviations of the FWHMs
from several CdSe QDs.
Blue: calculation with the usual Fermi-Dirac thermal smearing (Supplementary Note 5). Green: current
experiment. For c and d, the energy scale (eV or meV) is used,
for which the voltage divisions across the tunnelling junctions 1 and 2 have
been taken into account (Supplementary Notes 3 and 4).
The small FWHMs and their temperature dependence in Fig. 3a
will prevail without regard to any specific energy level of a QD as the energy
filtering occurs through an energy level of the QW, not the QD. To verify this,
we fabricated a unit having an ~5.5-nm CdSe QD as its central island.
Differential conductance measurements at varying temperatures are shown in Fig. 3b. We find their peak positions well reflect the size
dependence of QD energy levels, in agreement with the literature303637383940; compared to the unit with ~7-nm
CdSe QD (Fig. 3a), the unit with ~5.5-nm CdSe QD shows a higher conduction band
onset (at ~1.3 V) and a larger s-p level
separation (~240 mV; see also Supplementary Fig. 3 and Supplementary Note 2). Nevertheless, the peak
widths and their temperature dependence are essentially the same in Fig. 3a,b (see also Supplementary Fig. 4, Supplementary Tables 1–3 and Supplementary Notes 3 and 4), demonstrating
that the same energy filtering process is in effect without regard to a specific
QD energy level structure.We note that the peak widths in our differential conductance measurements, in
Fig. 3a,b, are much narrower than those observed by
others in STS measurements of QDs in the DBTJ configuration2829303132333435. For the latter, the FWHMs are
typically larger than ~50 mV even at cryogenic
temperatures (<5 K). For example, a comparison in Fig. 3c shows that the peak from room temperature
measurement of this study (green) is much narrower than the one from an STS
measurement of a CdSe QD at
4.9 K (red)33.For our experimental temperature range of 77–295 K, we find
a linear relationship between the FWHMs and the temperature, which is displayed
in Fig. 3d (green). The temperature dependences of the
FWHMs that result from electron transport without the energy filtering are also
shown in Fig. 3d, one from calculations based on
Fermi-Dirac electron energy distribution (blue line; Supplementary Figs 5–7 and Supplementary Note 5) and the other
from reported STS measurements (red)33. Here we note that the
slope for the experimental STS data is almost the same as that from the
Fermi-Dirac smearing calculations, affirming that the STS thermal behaviour is
governed by the usual Fermi-Dirac smearing. Comparing all three cases in Fig. 3d, it is clear that our method has effectively
filtered out hot electrons, leading to extremely narrow peak widths over all
temperature ranges explored.The temperature of electrons is determined by their energy distribution1213, which is reflected on the dI/dV peak widths.
We can, therefore, obtain effective electron temperatures of the energy-filtered
electrons by comparing the FWHMs of our experiment with those from the
Fermi-Dirac smearing calculations. For example, at reservoir temperature of
295 K, the electron temperature becomes ~45 K;
in Fig. 3d, the FWHM from Fermi-Dirac electrons at
45 K is the same as the FWHM from the energy-filtered electrons at
reservoir temperature of 295 K. Likewise, we obtain electron
temperatures of the energy-filtered electrons as ~35, ~22
and ~10 K for reservoir temperatures of 225, 150 and
77 K, respectively (Supplementary Note 4). These cold electrons promise numerous
practical applications as we will discuss in a later section.
Modelling
In our model, the system is made of the following components, a source (L), a QW,
a QD and a drain (R), with tunnelling barriers separating them (Fig. 4a). We assume a one-dimensional transport model in which
electrons are sequentially transported in a one-dimensional configuration space
from the source to the QW, QD and drain. The transport rates between adjacent
components are represented by
ΓL±(iW),
ΓD±(iW),
ΓW±(iD)
and
ΓR±(iD)
(see Fig. 4a for definitions). For a given set of rates
(at a voltage bias V), we simultaneously solve the rate equations29 (Supplementary Note
6), which gives an electrical current I at the bias
V.
Figure 4
Modelling for energy-filtered cold electron transport.
(a) Energy diagram.
ΓL±(iW):
the rate for an electron tunnelling from the source electrode (L) to the QW
(‘+’) or from QW to L
(‘−’) when the number of electrons in the
QW before the tunnelling is iW.
ΓD±(iW):
the rate for an electron tunnelling from the QD to the QW
(‘+’) or from QW to QD
(‘−’) when the number of electrons in the
QW before the tunnelling is iW.
ΓW±(iD):
the rate for an electron tunnelling from the QW to the QD
(‘+’) or from QD to QW
(‘−’) when the number of electrons in the
QD level before the tunnelling is iD.
ΓR±(iD):
the rate for an electron tunnelling from the drain electrode (R) to the QD
(‘+’) or from QD to R
(‘−’) when the number of electrons in the
QD before the tunnelling is iD. (b,c)
Schematic of an inelastic tunnelling in which an electron gains (b)
and loses (c) the energy, respectively.
(d–g) Calculated I–V
characteristics at 295, 225, 150 and 77 K, respectively.
Vs is the onset voltage for tunnelling to the
s-level of the QD. η: the voltage division factor
(Supplementary Note 6).
(h–k) Calculated
dI/dV’s at 295, 225, 150 and 77 K,
respectively. (l) Comparison of FWHMs of the dI/dV
peaks from the experiment (green) and model calculations (pink). The error
bars represent standard deviations of the FWHMs from all peaks in Fig. 3a (s, p and d) and Fig. 3b (s and p) at given temperatures;
see also Supplementary Fig. 4,
Supplementary Tables 2, 3
and Supplementary Note 4.
For the electron tunnelling between the QW and the QD, we have included inelastic
electron tunnelling processes. We assume that an electron tunnelling from a
lower energy state to a higher energy state (energy gain) is possible if coupled
with a phonon absorption4142 (Fig. 4b).
An inelastic tunnelling from a higher energy state to a lower energy state
(energy loss) occurs through phonon emission4142 and other
energy relaxation processes (for example, defect-assisted relaxation,
interface-roughness scattering and impurity scattering)1725434445464748 (Fig. 4c).
With these inelastic tunnelling events taken into account, the tunnelling
probabilities γ(ε,T)’s, where
ε is energy difference (ε is defined
negative when an electron gains energy and positive when loses energy) and
T is the absolute temperature, are given as follows:andHere γabsorp(ε, T) and
γemiss(ε, T) are
tunnelling probabilities with phonon absorption and phonon emission,
respectively, and n(|ε|, T) is the
Bose–Einstein distribution function of phonon population,
n(ε,
T)=1/(e−1),
where k is the Boltzmann constant. A(ε) is the
Einstein A coefficient for spontaneous emission of phonons4142.
γelastic(ε) is the elastic
tunnelling probability having Lorentzian distribution112549
and γrelax(ε) is the tunnelling
probability resulting from all other energy relaxation paths1725434445464748 (Supplementary Note 6). We note that
γ(ε<0, T) and
γ(ε>0, T) are temperature
dependent through the Bose–Einstein distribution function, which is
the origin of the temperature dependence of the
I–V’s and dI/dV’s.
The tunnelling probabilities γ(ε<0,
T) and γ(ε>0, T),
along with the probabilities of electrons occupying the QW and QD states,
determine the tunnelling rates
ΓD±(iW)
and
ΓW±(iD)
(Supplementary Note 6).The rate equations are constructed as in equations (35)–(39) in the
Supplementary Note 6, and are
solved numerically (Supplementary Figs
8–10 and Supplementary Note 6). The electrical current I is then given
bywhere e is the charge of an electron, and PD(0) and
PD(1) are the probabilities that the QD is occupied by no
electron and one electron, respectively. The dI/dV is obtained by
numerical differentiation of the I(V).Figure 4d–k shows resulting
I–V and dI/dV calculations at
different temperatures. We find an abrupt current jump,
Δ=~15 mV, at room temperature (Fig. 4d), in good agreement with the experimental measurement in
Fig. 2a. The current jumps become more abrupt as the
temperature decreases (Fig. 4e–g). The
dI/dV’s (Fig.
4h–k) show narrow peak widths, with the peak width decreasing
with decreasing temperature, in good agreement with the differential conductance
measurements in Fig. 3a,b. We also point out that the
dI/dV peaks in Fig. 3a,b are of a
triangular shape, not Gaussian or Lorentzian. Our model calculations in Fig. 4h–k faithfully reproduce the
triangular-type dI/dV peaks. For quantitative comparisons, we
display in Fig. 4l the FWHMs from our model calculations
and those from the experimental measurements. A very good agreement is found
between them over the temperature range investigated
(77–295 K).
Applications
The electron energy filtering and its associated cold electron transport have
profound technical implications. If our method can be properly implemented into
an electron system/device whose operation temperature or performance is limited
by the Fermi-Dirac thermal excitation, the electron energy filtering could
significantly relieve those thermal limitations. Here a specific example of
practical benefits of energy-filtered cold electron transport is demonstrated
with SETs.We fabricated SETs using the configuration shown in Fig.
1b, but with two alterations: (i) the CdSe QD was replaced by a metal nanoparticle
(~10 nm Au nanoparticle) and (ii) a gate electrode was
added using the configuration reported previously, in which the gate encompasses
the periphery of the source/insulating layer/drain stack in Fig.
1b27. Figure 5a,c display
measured I–V characteristics of a fabricated SET at
different temperatures. Over all temperatures studies, including room
temperature, we observe clear single-electron transport behaviour, that is,
Coulomb staircases (Fig. 5a) and Coulomb oscillations
(Fig. 5c). The SET characteristics at higher
temperatures, 100–295 K, highlight the effectiveness of
our method as follows. First, we note that at the lowest temperature
(10 K) the Coulomb staircase and Coulomb oscillations are accurately
described by the orthodox theory of single-electron transport350 (Fig. 5e–f). Now, we see that these
low-temperature SET characteristics are well preserved even at much higher
temperatures (100–295 K; Fig. 5a,c).
We note that with the usual Fermi-Dirac thermal smearing in effect (that is, no
energy filtering), the Coulomb staircases and Coulomb oscillations are
substantially or completely wiped out at these temperatures (Fig.
5b,d).
Figure 5
Use of cold electrons in single-electron transistors (SETs).
(a) Measured I–V characteristics of a fabricated SET
at different temperatures. The Coulomb staircase is clearly seen at all
temperatures, including room temperature. Above 10 K, each
I–V is vertically displaced by 75 pA
from the lower temperature one for clarity. VDS:
source-drain voltage. IDS: source-drain current.
(b) I–V characteristics calculated with
orthodox theory under the usual Fermi-Dirac distribution (Simulator: SIMON
2.0). (c) Measured Coulomb oscillations at different temperatures.
VG: gate voltage. VDS was
10 mV. Above 10 K, each I–V
is vertically displaced by 15 pA from the lower temperature one
for clarity. (d) Coulomb oscillations calculated with orthodox theory
under the usual Fermi-Dirac distribution. All temperatures indicated in
a–d are the reservoir temperatures.
(e,f) Comparison of the experimental and simulated Coulomb staircases
(e) and Coulomb oscillations (f) at 10 K.
T(exp): the reservoir temperature at which the experiment was
carried out. T(sim): the simulation temperature.
(g–l) Comparison of experimental and simulated
Coulomb staircases and Coulomb oscillations at elevated reservoir
temperatures (100–295 K). For the simulations, the
effective electron temperatures were used in the orthodox theory
calculation. Just a single set of parameters (except for the background
charge Q0) was used for all simulations in b,
d and e–l. The parameters are
C1=0.85 aF,
C2=2.9 aF,
CG=0.52 aF, R1=8.7 ×
107 Ω and R2=6.6 ×
108 Ω. The background charges
Q0 for e, f, g, h,
i, j, k and l are −0.075e,
0.45e, 0.075e, 0.40e, −0.075e,
0.50e, −0.025e and 0.50e,
respectively.
The preservation of the Coulomb staircases and Coulomb oscillations at elevated
reservoir temperatures is explained by the fact that the energy-filtered
electrons are much colder than the reservoir. Effective electron temperatures of
energy-filtered electrons are ~45, ~30 and
~15 K for the reservoir temperatures 295, 200 and
100 K, respectively (from Fig. 3d and equation
(6) in Supplementary Note 4). These
low electron temperatures explain the experimental data in Fig.
5a,c extremely well. This is shown in Fig.
5g–l, in which the orthodox theory calculations (red
lines) at these low temperatures faithfully reproduce all the experimental
Coulomb staircase and Coulomb oscillation data. The benefit of having
low-temperature electrons is clear in the current SET example: the requirement
of liquid He cooling can be lifted, yet the low-temperature SET performance
remains. With similar methodology, it is highly probable that the same benefit
can be extended to other systems, such as spintronic and optoelectronic
devices.
Discussion
It is worthwhile here to highlight one important element that has enabled the
room-temperature energy filtering of the present study. It is the large separation
between quantum levels in the QW energy filter. For energy filtering through a
quantum state to work at room temperature, the level spacing between adjacent
quantum levels in the energy filter must be appreciably larger than room-temperature
thermal energy, ~25 meV. The narrow quantum confinement in the
QW layer is able to produce large energy level separations because a QW can reliably
be made very thin, a few nm’s. For the chromium oxide QW of the present study, its thickness
(~2 nm) along with its QW depth (~1 eV)
produces energy level spacing larger than 250 meV (Supplementary Figs 2, 9 and Supplementary Notes 1, 6). This level separation
is more than ten times larger than room-temperature thermal energy, making
room-temperature energy filtering possible. An added practical benefit of the QW
energy filter is its facile formation. For the chromium oxide QW we used, the oxide is spontaneously formed on
the chromium electrode surface, a
relatively simple and controllable procedure. In addition, the materials used in the
QW energy filter formation (for example, Cr, Cr2O3 and SiO2) are compatible with
mainstream CMOS materials and processes. This CMOS compatibility is an attribute
that is likely to encourage development of the present energy filtering method for
practical device applications.For future research, it is instructive to identify key elements that would enable
lowering electron temperature even further and make the energy-filtered cold
electron transport more powerful. In principle, if there is no nearby energy state
in the QW to which the electron can be thermally excited, the tunnelling of an
electron from the source electrode to the QW state leaves the electron at zero
temperature910. Furthermore, if the electron does not gain
energy during the subsequent tunnelling event to the QD, the electron temperature
would remain effectively at zero Kelvin. If these two conditions were fulfilled, we
may envision electron transport at extremely low electron temperatures. The first
condition can be satisfied relatively easily as the energy level separation in the
QW can be made much larger than the room temperature thermal energy1724 (see also Supplementary
Note 6). Fulfilling the second condition, that is, blocking energy-gaining
pathways, however, is not straightforward and would need more detailed studies.
Phonon absorption, for example, would depend on many factors including the effective
Debye cutoff frequency, materials used (QD, dielectric, passivation layers, etc.),
device dimensions (for example, QD size) and geometric configuration. Understanding
these factors and engineering them could enable more effective blocking of
energy-gaining pathways, which would result in much colder electrons than those in
the present study.
Author contributions
S.J.K., R.S. and P.B. conceived and designed the experiments. R.S., P.B., V.R. and
L.-C.M. performed the experiments. P.B., R.S., K.C., J.K. and S.J.K. analysed the
data. S.J.K., P.B., K.C. and J.K. developed the model. P.B., W.W., K.C. and S.J.K.
performed numerical calculations. S.J.K. and P.B. wrote the paper. All authors
discussed the results and commented on the manuscript.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Bhadrachalam, P. et al. Energy-filtered cold
electron transport at room temperature. Nat. Commun. 5:4745 doi: 10.1038/5745
(2014).
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