Enabling Atmospheric Operation of Nanoscale Vacuum Channel Transistors

G. Rughoobur, J. Zhao, L. Jain,A. Zubair, T. Palacios,J. Kong,A. I. Akinwande

2020 Device Research Conference (DRC)(2020)

引用 5|浏览60
暂无评分
摘要
A vacuum channel transistor is the ultimate wide band-gap structure with potential for high Johnson figure of merit (~10 14 V/s) due to no electron scattering and no impact ionization/breakdown [1] , [2] . Hence, nanoscale vacuum channel transistors (NVCTs) can possibly outperform solid-state transistors in terms of speed, breakdown voltage and reliability in harsh environments [1] . Carriers are injected into the channel by electron tunneling across a barrier narrowed by an electric field. Such electron sources can be realized using nanoscale gated Si field emitter arrays (FEAs) with high packing densities (≥10 8 /cm 2 ) and self-aligned apertures which have low turn-on voltage (8.5 V), low operating voltage, high current density (150 A/cm 2 ) and long lifetime (>300 hours) [3] . The barrier height is nonetheless sensitive to adsorption/desorption of gas molecules, resulting in large current variations in poor vacuum, which can also generate energetic ions that erode the emitter. Hence FEAs require costly and bulky ultra-high vacuum (UHV) systems for reliability [4] . Using multi-layers of graphene (Gr) that withstand high pressure gradients and, are transparent to electrons, but impervious to gas molecules, can enable operation of these FEAs in poor vacuum [5] , [6] . In this paper, Gr layers are used to encapsulate such FEAs with two self-aligned gates ( Fig. 1 ); this structure allows an independent control of the bias applied to the Gr layer, and significantly reduces the volume to be encapsulated.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要