| Literature DB >> 32924510 |
Luis Portilla1,2, Jianwen Zhao2, Yan Wang1, Liping Sun3, Fengzhu Li1, Malo Robin2, Miaomiao Wei2, Zheng Cui2, Luigi G Occhipinti4, Thomas D Anthopoulos5, Vincenzo Pecunia1.
Abstract
The development of ultralow-power and easy-to-fabricate electronics with potential for large-scale circuit integration (i.e., complementary or complementary-like) is an outstanding challenge for emerging off-the-grid applications, e.g., remote sensing, "place-and-forget", and the Internet of Things. Herein we address this challenge through the development of ambipolar transistors relying on solution-processed polymer-sorted semiconducting carbon nanotube networks (sc-SWCNTNs) operating in the deep-subthreshold regime. Application of self-assembled monolayers at the active channel interface enables the fine-tuning of sc-SWCNTN transistors toward well-balanced ambipolar deep-subthreshold characteristics. The significance of these features is assessed by exploring the applicability of such transistors to complementary-like integrated circuits, with respect to which the impact of the subthreshold slope and flatband voltage on voltage and power requirements is studied experimentally and theoretically. As demonstrated with inverter and NAND gates, the ambipolar deep-subthreshold sc-SWCNTN approach enables digital circuits with complementary-like operation and characteristics including wide noise margins and ultralow operational voltages (≤0.5 V), while exhibiting record-low power consumption (≤1 pW/μm). Among thin-film transistor technologies with minimal material complexity, our approach achieves the lowest energy and power dissipation figures reported to date, which are compatible with and highly attractive for emerging off-the-grid applications.Entities:
Keywords: carbon nanotubes; hybrid nanodielectrics; subthreshold; thin-film transistor; ultralow power
Year: 2020 PMID: 32924510 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c06619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881