Coaxial boron nitride nanotubes as interfacial dielectric layers to lower interface trap density in carbon nanotube transistors
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Published:2023-11
Issue:11
Volume:16
Page:12840-12848
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ISSN:1998-0124
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Container-title:Nano Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nano Res.
Author:
Otsuka Keigo,Sugihara Taiki,Inoue Taiki,Jia Weijie,Matsushita Satoru,Saito Takanobu,Lee Minhyeok,Taniguchi Takashi,Watanabe Kenji,Pitner Gregory,Li Ming-Yang,Chao Tzu-Ang,Xiang Rong,Chiashi Shohei,Maruyama Shigeo
Abstract
AbstractA semiconductor/dielectric interface is one of the dominant factors in device characteristics, and a variety of oxides with high dielectric constants and low interface trap densities have been used in carbon nanotube transistors. Given the crystal structure of nanotubes with no dangling bonds, there remains room to investigate unconventional dielectric materials. Here, we fabricate carbon nanotube transistors with boron nitride nanotubes as interfacial layers between channels and gate dielectrics, where a single semiconducting nanotube is used to focus on switching behaviors at the subthreshold regime. The subthreshold swing of 68 mV·dec−1 is obtained despite a 100-nm-thick SiO2 dielectric, corresponding to the effective interface trap density of 5.2 × 1011 cm−2·eV−1, one order of magnitude lower than those of carbon nanotube devices without boron nitride passivation. The interfacial layers also result in the mild suppression of threshold voltage variation and hysteresis. We achieve Ohmic contacts through the selective etching of boron nitride nanotubes with XeF2 gas, overcoming the trade-off imposed by wrapping the inner nanotubes. Negligible impacts of fluorinating carbon nanotubes on device performances are also confirmed as long as the etching is applied exclusively at source/drain regions. Our results represent an important step toward nanoelectronics that exploit the advantage of one-dimensional van der Waals heterostructures.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,General Materials Science,Condensed Matter Physics,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
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