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Atomic configurations of silicon nanowires created through assembly of silicon clusters, and connected to aluminum electrodes. Left nanowire is 0.6 nanometers long, made up of a single cluster composed of 24 silicon atoms, while the wire on the right is 3 nanometers long, made up of clusters. Large blue balls depict aluminum atoms; yellow balls are silicon, and small blue balls are hydrogen. |
Large-scale simulations of silicon nanowires just several atoms in diameter have given device designers new clues about how these nanometer-scale devices will one day perform. The work provides a basis for anticipating how the quantum mechanical effects that dominate behavior of materials at this size scale will alter the operation of future generations of electronic devices.
Writing in the August 28 issue of Physical Review Letters, Uzi Landman, Robert Barnett and Andrew Scherbakov from the Georgia Institute of Technology, and Phaedon Avouris from the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, report on a number of issues pertaining to the atomic structure, electronic properties and electrical transport in silicon nanowires that will have to be considered by designers using devices this small.
"It's a much-discussed expectation that devices of this size will be different, but in what ways and by how much, remained unknown," said Uzi Landman, Regents' Professor of Physics and director of the Georgia Tech Center for Computational Materials Science. "In this study, we have explored certain unique properties of systems this small through first-principles quantum mechanical simulations. Such simulations, which are to the best of our knowledge the largest ones to date, are essential for gaining reliable and predictive information about these systems. They were enabled by a combination of improved methodologies and the availability of high-powered computers."
To boost speed and reduce energy use, engineers are being pushed to make electronic devices smaller and to pack more of them onto a chip. This pressure will eventually drive them to use features as small as one nanometer (one-billionth of a meter, or a hundred-thousandth the width of a human hair). When that happens, he noted, device operation will be dominated by quantum mechanical effects -- and the expectations that have long governed device design will no longer apply.
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| Atomic configuration of a silicon wire created through etching of crystalline silicon. The wire is 3 nanometers long and one nanometer wide, attached to aluminum electrodes. The aluminum atoms are depicted as large blue balls; the silicon atoms as yellow balls, and the passivating hydrogen atoms as small blue balls. |
The researchers simulated silicon nanowires etched from bulk silicon, or self-assembled from clusters containing 24 atoms of silicon. In each case, the silicon was passivated by attaching hydrogen atoms to unused bonds, and the wires were connected to aluminum leads.
The theoretical simulations produced data on the nanowires' electrical conductance, the influence of the silicon-metal interface and the role that doping with aluminum atoms may play in changing materials properties. The work also suggests new ways of doping ultra-small transistor channels that could circumvent some current technological issues.
"This work attempts
to fill in some of the gaps in our knowledge in this area," said
Dr. Phaedon Avouris, manager of Nanometer Scale Science & Technology
for IBM's Research Division at the T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown
Heights, N.Y. "While the wires on which we report here are significantly
smaller than those likely to be used in the near future, they are particularly
useful because they
tell us what to expect in the fully quantum mechanical limit -- the ultimate
miniaturization limit. The calculations have revealed a number of significant
changes in important properties."
Carried out on an IBM
SP-2 computer at Georgia Tech, the simulations revealed that:
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| Electronic density of states near the Fermi level for undoped (left) and doped (right) silicon nanowires created through an assembly of silicon clusters, and connected to aluminum electrodes. In both cases, the density of states iso-surfaces (depicted in red) is superimposed on the atomic structure of the nanowire. Note the aluminum doping atoms inside each of the silicon clusters shown on the right. The electronic density of states extends through the entire doped nanowire, bridging the two connected aluminum electrodes, resulting in a low threshold bias voltage for the current flow through the doped nanowire. On the other hand, for the undoped nanowire (left), the density of states penetrates only a short distance into the silicon, and a relatively large bias voltage is required for current flow. Aluminum atoms are shown as large blue balls; silicon atoms as yellow balls and passivating hydrogen atoms as small blue balls. |
This behavior results, at certain electron wavelengths and wire configurations, in interference resonances that cause the channel to appear transparent, leading to the occurrence of spikes in the current flowing through the nanoscale channel.
"When building a device, engineers would have to take this into account and either find ways to use it or avoid it," Landman added. "In macroscopic devices, this phenomenon is of no particular consequence, showing again that small devices are different in ways that go beyond simple scaling with size."
The next step is to actually fabricate and test devices this small. The research was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy.
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