| Literature DB >> 28092953 |
Kai Xu1,2, Dongxue Chen1,3,4, Fengyou Yang1,2, Zhenxing Wang1, Lei Yin1,2, Feng Wang1,2, Ruiqing Cheng1,2, Kaihui Liu3, Jie Xiong5, Qian Liu1,6, Jun He1.
Abstract
Two-dimensional materials (2DMs) are competitive candidates in replacing or supplementing conventional semiconductors owing to their atomically uniform thickness. However, current conventional micro/nanofabrication technologies realize hardly ultrashort channel and integration, especially for sub-10 nm. Meanwhile, experimental device performance associated with the scaling of dimension needs to be investigated, due to the short channel effects. Here, we show a novel and universal technological method to fabricate sub-10 nm gaps with sharp edges and steep sidewalls. The realization of sub-10 nm gaps derives from a corrosion crack along the cleavage plane of Bi2O3. By this method, ultrathin body field-effect transistors (FETs), consisting of 8.2 nm channel length, 6 nm high-k dielectric, and 0.7 nm monolayer MoS2, exhibit no obvious short channel effects. The corresponding current on/off ratio and subthreshold swing reaches to 106 and 140 mV/dec, respectively. Moreover, integrated circuits with sub-10 nm channel are capable of operating as digital inverters with high voltage gain. The results suggest our technological method can be used to fabricate the ultrashort channel nanopatterns, build the experimental groundwork for 2DMs FETs with sub-10 nm channel length and 2DMs integrated circuits, and offer new potential opportunities for large-scale device constructions and applications.Entities:
Keywords: 2D materials; Sub-10 nm; field-effect transistors; nanopatterns; very-large-scale integration
Year: 2017 PMID: 28092953 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189