Author
Listed:
- Juan Pablo Llinas
(University of California
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Andrew Fairbrother
(Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology)
- Gabriela Borin Barin
(Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology)
- Wu Shi
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
UC Berkeley)
- Kyunghoon Lee
(University of California
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Shuang Wu
(University of California
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Byung Yong Choi
(University of California
Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd.)
- Rohit Braganza
(University of California
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Jordan Lear
(University of California)
- Nicholas Kau
(UC Berkeley)
- Wonwoo Choi
(UC Berkeley)
- Chen Chen
(UC Berkeley)
- Zahra Pedramrazi
(UC Berkeley)
- Tim Dumslaff
(Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research)
- Akimitsu Narita
(Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research)
- Xinliang Feng
(TU Dresden)
- Klaus Müllen
(Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research)
- Felix Fischer
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
UC Berkeley
Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Alex Zettl
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
UC Berkeley
Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Pascal Ruffieux
(Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology)
- Eli Yablonovitch
(University of California
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Michael Crommie
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
UC Berkeley
Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Roman Fasel
(Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
University of Bern)
- Jeffrey Bokor
(University of California
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Abstract
Bottom-up synthesized graphene nanoribbons and graphene nanoribbon heterostructures have promising electronic properties for high-performance field-effect transistors and ultra-low power devices such as tunneling field-effect transistors. However, the short length and wide band gap of these graphene nanoribbons have prevented the fabrication of devices with the desired performance and switching behavior. Here, by fabricating short channel (L ch ~ 20 nm) devices with a thin, high-κ gate dielectric and a 9-atom wide (0.95 nm) armchair graphene nanoribbon as the channel material, we demonstrate field-effect transistors with high on-current (I on > 1 μA at V d = −1 V) and high I on /I off ~ 105 at room temperature. We find that the performance of these devices is limited by tunneling through the Schottky barrier at the contacts and we observe an increase in the transparency of the barrier by increasing the gate field near the contacts. Our results thus demonstrate successful fabrication of high-performance short-channel field-effect transistors with bottom-up synthesized armchair graphene nanoribbons.
Suggested Citation
Juan Pablo Llinas & Andrew Fairbrother & Gabriela Borin Barin & Wu Shi & Kyunghoon Lee & Shuang Wu & Byung Yong Choi & Rohit Braganza & Jordan Lear & Nicholas Kau & Wonwoo Choi & Chen Chen & Zahra Ped, 2017.
"Short-channel field-effect transistors with 9-atom and 13-atom wide graphene nanoribbons,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 8(1), pages 1-6, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:8:y:2017:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-017-00734-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00734-x
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