TY - JOUR
T1 - The channel length effect on the electrical performance of suspended-single-wall-carbon-nanotube-based field effect transistors
AU - Assa, B.
AU - El Khakani, M. A.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - We report on the electrical performance of field effect transistor (FET) nanodevices based on suspended single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) grown by our 'all-laser' synthesis process. The attractiveness of the proposed approach lies in the combination of standard microfabrication processing with the in situ 'all-laser' localized growth of SWCNTs, offering an affordable way of directly integrating SWCNTs into nanodevices. The 'all-laser' process uses the same KrF excimer laser (248nm), first, to deposit the nanocatalyzed electrodes and, in a second step, to grow the SWCNTs in a suspended geometry, achieving thereby the lateral bridging of the electrodes. The nanocatalyzed electrodes consist of a multilayer stack sandwiching a catalyst nanolayer (∼5nm thick) composed of Co/Ni nanoparticles. The 'all-laser' grown SWCNTs (∼1nm diameter) are most often seen to self-assemble into bundles (10-20nm diameter) and to bridge laterally the various gap lengths (in the 2-10νm investigation range) separating adjacent electrodes. The suspended-SWCNT-based FETs were found to behave as p-type transistors, in air and at room temperature, with very high ON/OFF switching ratios (whose magnitude markedly increases as the active channel length is reduced). For the shortest gap (i.e.2νm), the suspended-SWCNT-based FETs exhibited not only an ON/OFF switching ratio in excess of seven orders of magnitude, but also an ON-state conductance as high as 3.26νS. Their corresponding effective carrier mobility was estimated (at VSD = 100mV) to a value of ∼4000cm2V -1s-1, which is almost ten times higher than the hole mobility in single-crystal silicon at room temperature.
AB - We report on the electrical performance of field effect transistor (FET) nanodevices based on suspended single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) grown by our 'all-laser' synthesis process. The attractiveness of the proposed approach lies in the combination of standard microfabrication processing with the in situ 'all-laser' localized growth of SWCNTs, offering an affordable way of directly integrating SWCNTs into nanodevices. The 'all-laser' process uses the same KrF excimer laser (248nm), first, to deposit the nanocatalyzed electrodes and, in a second step, to grow the SWCNTs in a suspended geometry, achieving thereby the lateral bridging of the electrodes. The nanocatalyzed electrodes consist of a multilayer stack sandwiching a catalyst nanolayer (∼5nm thick) composed of Co/Ni nanoparticles. The 'all-laser' grown SWCNTs (∼1nm diameter) are most often seen to self-assemble into bundles (10-20nm diameter) and to bridge laterally the various gap lengths (in the 2-10νm investigation range) separating adjacent electrodes. The suspended-SWCNT-based FETs were found to behave as p-type transistors, in air and at room temperature, with very high ON/OFF switching ratios (whose magnitude markedly increases as the active channel length is reduced). For the shortest gap (i.e.2νm), the suspended-SWCNT-based FETs exhibited not only an ON/OFF switching ratio in excess of seven orders of magnitude, but also an ON-state conductance as high as 3.26νS. Their corresponding effective carrier mobility was estimated (at VSD = 100mV) to a value of ∼4000cm2V -1s-1, which is almost ten times higher than the hole mobility in single-crystal silicon at room temperature.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=65149089062&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/0957-4484/20/17/175203
DO - 10.1088/0957-4484/20/17/175203
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:65149089062
SN - 0957-4484
VL - 20
JO - Nanotechnology
JF - Nanotechnology
IS - 17
M1 - 175203
ER -