
Develops a new transistor structure using ‘the miracle material’ graphene to increase the possibilities for future transistors
Reported online by the journal Science, 17th May
[SEOUL, Korea = Whowired] May 18, 2012--Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, the core
R&D incubator for Samsung Electronics, has developed a new transistor
structure utilizing graphene, touted as the “miracle material.”
As published online in the journal Science on
Thursday, 17th May, this research is regarded to have brought us one
step closer to the development of transistors that can overcome the limits of conventional
silicon.
Currently, semiconductor devices consist of
billions of silicon transistors. To increase the performance of semiconductors
(the speed of devices), the options have to been to either reduce the size of individual
transistors to shorten the traveling distance of electrons, or to use a
material with higher electron mobility which allows for faster electron
velocity. For the past 40 years, the industry has been increasing performance by
reducing size. However, experts believe we are now nearing the potential limits
of scaling down.
Since graphene possesses electron mobility about 200
times greater than that of silicon, it has been considered a potential substitute.
Although one issue with graphene is that, unlike conventional semiconducting
materials, current cannot be switched off because it is semi-metallic. This has
become the key issue in realizing graphene transistors. Both on and off flow of
current is required in a transistor to represent “1” and “0” of digital signals.
Previous solutions and research have tried to convert graphene into a semi-conductor.
However, this radically decreased the mobility of graphene, leading to skepticism
over the feasibility of graphene transistors.
By re-engineering the basic operating principles
of digital switches, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology has developed a
device that can switch off the current in graphene without degrading its
mobility. The demonstrated graphene-silicon Schottky barrier can switch current on or off by controlling
the height of the barrier. The new device was named Barristor, after its barrier-controllable
feature.
In addition, to expand the research into the possibility
of logic device applications, the most basic logic gate (inverter) and logic
circuits (half-adder) were fabricated, and basic operation (adding) was
demonstrated.
Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology owns 9 major
patents related to the structure and the operating method of the Graphene Barristor.
As demonstrated in this research, the institute has
solved the most difficult problem in graphene device research and has opened
the door to new directions for future studies. This breakthrough continues to
keep Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology at the forefront of graphene-related
industries.
*Schottky Barrier: Named after a German
physicist Walter H Schottky, it is a potential (energy) barrier formed at a
metal-semiconductor interface. It prevents an electric charge to flow from
metal to silicon. Generally, metal-semiconductor junction would have fixed work
function and Schottky barrier height, but as for graphene, Schottky barrier height
can be controlled through the work function.
*Work Function: The minimum energy needed to take
an electron out of material.
*Inverter: A basic logic gate that converts a
digital signal into the opposite level; “0” into “1” or vice versa.
*Half-Adder: A logical circuit that performs
addition of two binary digits.
About
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. is a global leader in semiconductor,
telecommunication, digital media and digital convergence technologies with 2011
consolidated sales of US$143.1 billion. Employing approximately 206,000 people
in 197 offices across 72 countries, the company operates two separate
organizations to coordinate its nine independent business units: Digital Media
& Communications, comprising Visual Display, Mobile Communications,
Telecommunication Systems, Digital Appliances, IT Solutions, and Digital
Imaging; and Device Solutions, consisting of Memory, System LSI and LED.
Recognized for its industry-leading performance across a range of economic,
environmental and social criteria, Samsung Electronics was named the world’s
most sustainable technology company in the 2011 Dow Jones Sustainability Index.
For more information, please visit www.samsung.com.
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