| Literature DB >> 28546634 |
Erica Guerriero1, Paolo Pedrinazzi1, Aida Mansouri1, Omid Habibpour2, Michael Winters2, Niklas Rorsman2, Ashkan Behnam3, Enrique A Carrion3, Amaia Pesquera4, Alba Centeno4, Amaia Zurutuza4, Eric Pop5, Herbert Zirath2, Roman Sordan6.
Abstract
The high-frequency performance of transistors is usually assessed by speed and gain figures of merit, such as the maximum oscillation frequency f max, cutoff frequency f T, ratio f max/f T, forward transmission coefficient S 21, and open-circuit voltage gain A v. All these figures of merit must be as large as possible for transistors to be useful in practical electronics applications. Here we demonstrate high-performance graphene field-effect transistors (GFETs) with a thin AlOx gate dielectric which outperform previous state-of-the-art GFETs: we obtained f max/f T > 3, A v > 30 dB, and S 21 = 12.5 dB (at 10 MHz and depending on the transistor geometry) from S-parameter measurements. A dc characterization of GFETs in ambient conditions reveals good current saturation and relatively large transconductance ~600 S/m. The realized GFETs offer the prospect of using graphene in a much wider range of electronic applications which require substantial gain.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28546634 PMCID: PMC5445082 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02541-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1High-frequency GFET. (a) Optical image of one of the fabricated GFETs with the gate length L = 1.1 μm. Graphene stripe cannot be seen as it is completely covered by the contacts. (b) Schematic of the central part of the GFET. Source (S) and drain (D) contacts (Au; yellow) are separated by an underlap (length u) from the gate (G) contact (Al; red core), which is covered by an insulating layer (AlOx; gray shell). Width of graphene stripes was 5, 20 and 50 μm. All GFETs had the same contact width (~50 μm) regardless of the stripe width. The channel width . (c) Scanning electron microscopy image of the central part of one the fabricated GFETs with the gate length L = 1 μm. The underlap is nm.
Figure 2Output characteristics and small-signal conductances of the fabricated GFETs in ambient air. (a) Drain current as a function of for different in a GFET with μm and μm. The onset of saturation is at and it moves to larger at larger . (b) The transconductance and output conductance of the fabricated GFETs at the operating point at which they exhibit the largest voltage gain .
Figure 3The highest gain in each of the fabricated GFETs at 10 MHz. (a) The open circuit voltage gain as a function of the gate length L. (b) The forward gain as a function of . The highest value of 12.5 dB was obtained for μm and μm. A fit is suggested by the black line because scales with and therefore with .
Figure 4The largest values of the high-frequency transistor response parameters of each fabricated GFET as a function of gate length . (a) The cuttof frequency and (b) maximum oscillation frequency . A fit is suggested by the black line in both plots.
Figure 5The maximum oscillation frequency as a function of the cutoff frequency of each fabricated GFET for different gate lengths and channel widths . The ratio varies between 1 and 3.