Tutorial T5 Will Carbon Replace Silicon? The future of graphitic electronics. 1:30-2:20 Jim Meindl Nanoelectronics in Retrospect and Prospect 2:20-3:10 Millie Dresselhaus From Graphene to Graphite to Nanotubes to Graphene. 3:10-3:30 Break 3:30-4:20 Phillip Kim The Physics of Graphene 4:20-5:10 Walt de Heer Epitaxial Graphene: Designing a new electronics material from the ground up 5:10-5:30 Panel Discussion
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Tutorial T5 Will Carbon Replace Silicon? The future of graphitic electronics.
1:30-2:20 Jim Meindl Nanoelectronics in Retrospect and Prospect
2:20-3:10 Millie Dresselhaus From Graphene to Graphite to Nanotubes to Graphene.
3:10-3:30 Break
3:30-4:20 Phillip Kim The Physics of Graphene
4:20-5:10 Walt de Heer Epitaxial Graphene:
Designing a new electronics material from the ground up
5:10-5:30 Panel Discussion
Outline
• The problem
• The carbon solution
• Why epitaxial graphene
• Properties
• Patterning
• Prototype Devices
• Chemistry: opening a gap
The first transistor (Bell labs 1947)
The “crystal triode” John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley
The Shockley Building
The silicon revolution
The end.
The carbon solution
Carbon is prominent!
Carbon electronics
Carbon nanotubes: Room temperature ballistic conductors
T. Ando, T. Nakanishi and R. Saito
J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 67, 2857 (1998)
“The absence of backward scattering is
shown to be ascribed to Berry's phase
which corresponds to a sign change of the
wave function under a rotation of a
neutrino-like particle* in the wave vector
space in a two-dimensional graphite”
*i.e obeying the Dirac-Weyl equation
Quantized ballistic conductance
Nanotube fiber!
- L (!m)
G (
2e
2/h
)
L
V
reservoir
reservoir
dissipation in reservoir
no dissipation in channelreservoir
reservoir
dissipation in river bed
Diffusive transport Ballistic transport
Carbon nanotube transistors
Band structure of graphene: (used for graphite , Wallace 1947, McClure 1957,
and for nanotube transport , Ando 1998)
• Linear dispersion
• Symmetry electrons - holes
• Pseudo spin
)ˆ,ˆ,ˆ(ˆzyx
!!!! =
!
" x =0 1
1 0
#
$ %
&
' ( ;" y =
0 )i
i 0
#
$ %
&
' ( ;" z =
1 0
0 )1
#
$ %
&
' (
!
H = vF " ˆ # " p
!
E = ±vF p
T. Ando, J. Phys. Soc. Jpn
67 (1998) 2857
Graphene ribbons resemble nanotubes
metallic bands edge states
gap!1/width
semiconducting
mettalic
EF
Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 206805 (2007)
Quantum confinement gap in exfoliated graphene ribbons
•A reversible, reproducible, drop in the conductivity is observed at 200K.!
• The resistance is at its theoretical minimum . !
•Transport is phase coherent over the entire structure (0.5X5 µm).!
• Resistance is at its theoretical minumum (no boundary scattering!)!
• Oscillations periodic in the magnetic field are seen.!
180 200 220 240 260 280 3000
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
Temperature (K)
Anomalous Conductance Transition
Gating Epitaxial Graphene
Graphene transistors (Conventional FETs)
Side gate structure
Resi
stance
(k!
/sq
)
-1 1 0
-10 -10 0
-6 -4 -2 0 2
20
30
10
0.3 0.4 0.5
0.6
0.2
0
20
22
24
26
Gate Voltage (V)
Si-face Top gate
C-face Top gate
C-face Side gate
1.5x12.5!m
3.5x12.5!m
0.1x1!m
Top and side gated FETs
s d
g1
g3
g2
S
d
g1
g2
Top gated FET
Side gated FET
The first epitaxial graphene transistors
Xuebin Li
Q29.00006
EF!
The Dirac point
!#
xy (Hall)(k
")$
5
0
-5
20
10
15
5
0 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0
Vg(V) -6
280 K!
-5 Tesla!
1.5!mx12!m Positive Hall (electrons)
Negative Hall (holes)
#xx
(R
esi
sta
nce
)(k"
)$
Dirac point ED
S
G
G
D
Top gated Hall bar, Si face
Jakub Kedzierski,
Craig Keast, Peter Wyatt,
Paul Healey, Pei-Lan Hsu
MIT Lincoln Labs
Mike Spinkle, Claire Berger, Walt de Heer, Georgia institute of Technology
Large scale patterned epitaxial graphene FET’s
Production process
SiC blank
Furnace Graphitize
Device Integration
Hydrogen etch
Pattern
Final Device Geometry
•! Device description and cross section –! Nominal device – Graphene/SiC active layer (C-side), L = 10um, W = 5 um,
ridge parallel, 50nm HfO2 dielectric, Al gate
–! Microscope image shown before gate lift-off
W=5um
L=10um
Al gate (next level)
Pt Drain
Pt Source SiC
Gr
SiC
Al
SiC Al
HfO2
Graphene
Set of Identical Devices (Si-face)
•! Minimum conductivity –! 130uS to 250uS
•! Field Effect Mobility values –! 400-1000 cm2/Vs
•! Ion/Ioff ~ 5
Drain current vs. gate voltage at Vd = 0.5V
- 5 - 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 0 1 2 3 0 . 0
2 0 0 . 0 !
4 0 0 . 0 !
6 0 0 . 0 !
8 0 0 . 0 !
1 . 0 m
1 . 2 m
1 . 4 m
% d (
1/O
hm
s)
V g ( V )
G r a p h C W 2 S i T
H f O 2 = 4 0 n m W = 5 µ m , L = 1 0 µ m
Quantum Interference Device
Standing wave; (Destructive interference); no transmission!
Propagating wave; unit transmission!
V=0!
Chemistry: opening a gap
Ruoff et al. Nature 448, 457 (2007)
Graphite Graphene oxide (GO)
oxidation
Reduction of GO
Preparation: Hummer’s method
graphene oxide
2 !m$2 !m
AC electrophoresis 2-3 Volts, 20-50 kHz
Separation between electrodes: 400 nm, 800 nm, 1400 nm
Graphene oxide suspension from N. Kovtyukhva and T. Mallouk, Penn State University
Device made of GO flakes
Xiaosong Wu, Mike Sprinkle, Xuebin Li, Fan Ming, Claire Berger, Walt de Heer
L29.00012 Mike Sprinkle; L29.00009, Fan Ming
Reverse
Forward
&b
•! Asymmetric in bias voltage
•! Asymmetry correlates with the lengths of the contact edges
•! There is no systematic dependence on the width of the gap
For over 20 samples studied: Ionized donor density at 300K "d=2.2*1010 to 6.1*1011 cm-2
Barrier : &b = 0.5 to 0.7 eV
Typical I-V curve
dI/dV=74 k!$
GO flake
“Burnt”
+
-
breakdown
GO mobility
! = 850 cm2/Vs at breakdown
%d=1X1011/cm2
#b decreases from 0.7 to 0.55 eV "d increases from 3.8*1011 to 9.1*1010 cm-2
180! for 16 hours
as deposited
Tuning the gap
Optical image of a graphene cross after RIE etching.
HSQ mask with window: in situ oxidation
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15-0.2
-0.15
-0.1
-0.05
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
Vsd
(V)
I (
µ A)
100K
In situ patterned oxidation of graphene structure
Chemical Oxidation
Graphene oxide
(2)
Deposit dielectric and metal gate electrode
Source Drain Gate
(3)
SiC
HSQ
Graphene ribbon
(1) Pattern epitaxial graphene ribbon
insert afm image here
EG-GO-EG transistor
Examples of patterned Epitaxial Graphene structures!
Quantum Interference Device
Side gated ribbon (FET)
gate
gate
drain
source
Hall bar (various ribbon widths)
I I
V
V
The temperature dependence of the device parameters. a) The temperature dependence of the Schottky barrier height. b) The area density of ionized donors as a function of inverse temperature. Circle: experiment; Line: A fit to an exponential law (Nd=N0exp(-Ei/2kBT)) gives the ionization energy: Ei=62 meV.
Band structure of graphene: (used to explain graphite , Wallace 1947)
“DIRAC CONE” Near ED, E=±v|p|= ± v|hk|
v~ 108 cm/s
Xiaosong Wu, Mike Sprinkle, Xuebin Li, Fan Ming, Claire Berger, Walt A. de Heer
Submitted to PRL, Dec. 2007 (ConMat: 0712.0820v1)
The epitaxial-graphene/graphite-oxide junction,
an essential step towards epitaxial graphene electronics
Vsd > 2 V
320K 300K 270K 240K 200K 150K 100K 77K
EG-GO-EG, a 400nm gap
For over 20 samples studied: Ionized donor density at 300K "d=2.2*1010 to 6.1*1011 cm-2
Barrier : &b = 0.5 to 0.7 eV
Optical absorbance of Graphene Oxide
GO MSM device a) A bilayer rectangular GO flake over a 400nm Au gap. b) A pentagon-shaped GO flake bridges two MEG electrodes. The bright spots on MEG are residue of e-beam resist: PMMA, while the bright lines are wrinkles that are often seen in C-face EG. c) I-V characteristics of an 800 nm device. d) An energy band diagram for a EG-GO-EG device. Two Schottky barriers form at the contact edges. i) zero bias. ii) finite bias.
Figure 2. I-V characteristics of a 400 nm device at various temperatures: 320, 300, 270, 240, 200, 150, 100, 77K. The sample was annealed at 180 C for 16 hours. a) Nonlinear I-V. The inset: I-V before (blue) and after (red) curing. b) I/T3/2 as a function of Vsd
1/4/T.
Production of patterned structures
A Raman scattering study of epitaxially-grown graphite on silicon carbide;
pyrolitic graphite and graphene: C. Faugeras,
A. Nerriere,M. Potemski,A Mahmood,E. Dujardin,C. Berger ,and W. A. de Heer
cond-mat0709.2538v3 19 Sep 2007
(Graphitic residue)
(SiC substrate)
5-10 layers
70-90 layers
Monolayer on SiO2
Epitaxial multilayer graphene Graphite (HOPG)
K K’
q~K
K K’
q~K
Graphene
#
5
40
60
50
n ≈
Substrate-induced band gap opening in epitaxial graphene