Arranged
around it are a selection of 2-D materials that have been investigated.
Courtesy:
Mathieu Luisier/ETH Zurich.
With the
increasing miniaturization of electronic components, researchers are struggling
with undesirable side effects: In the case of nanometer-scale transistors made
of conventional materials such as silicon, quantum effects occur that impair
their functionality. One of these quantum effects, for example, is additional
leakage currents, i.e. currents that flow "astray" and not via the
conductor provided between the source and drain contacts. It is therefore
believed that Moore's scaling law, which states that the number of integrated
circuits per unit area doubles every 12-18 months, will reach its limits in the
near future because of the increasing challenges associated with the
miniaturization of their active components. This ultimately means that the
currently manufactured silicon-based transistors—called FinFETs and equipping
almost every supercomputer—can no longer be made arbitrarily smaller due to
quantum effects.
Two-dimensional
beacons of hope
However, a
new study by researchers at ETH Zurich and EPF Lausanne shows that this problem
could be overcome with new two-dimensional (2-D) materials—or at least that is
what the simulations they have carried out on the "Piz Daint"
supercomputer suggest.
The
research group, led by Mathieu Luisier from the Institute for Integrated
Systems (IIS) at ETH Zurich and Nicola Marzari from EPF Lausanne, used the
research results that Marzari and his team had already achieved as the basis
for their new simulations: Back in 2018, 14 years after the discovery of
graphene first made it clear that two-dimensional materials could be produced,
they used complex simulations on "Piz Daint" to sift through a pool
of more than 100,000 materials; they extracted 1,825 promising components from
which 2-D layers of material could be obtained.
The
researchers selected 100 candidates from these more than 1,800 materials, each
of which consists of a monolayer of atoms and could be suitable for the
construction of ultra-scaled field-effect transistors (FETs). They have now
investigated their properties under the "ab initio" microscope. In
other words, they used the CSCS supercomputer "Piz Daint" to first
determine the atomic structure of these materials using density functional
theory (DFT). They then combined these calculations with a so-called Quantum
Transport solver to simulate the electron and hole current flows through the
virtually generated transistors. The Quantum Transport Simulator used was developed
by Luisier together with another ETH research team, and the underlying method
was awarded the Gordon Bell Prize in 2019.
Finding
the optimal 2-D candidate
The
decisive factor for the transistor's viability is whether the current can be
optimally controlled by one or several gate contact(s). Thanks to the
ultra-thin nature of 2-D materials—usually thinner than a nanometer—a single
gate contact can modulate the flow of electrons and hole currents, thus
completely switching a transistor on and off.
Structure
of a single-gate FET with a channel made of a 2-D material. Arranged around it
are a selection of 2-D materials that have been investigated. (Mathieu
Luisier/ETH Zürich)
"Although
all 2-D materials have this property, not all of them lend themselves to logic
applications," Luisier emphasizes, "only those that have a large
enough band gap between the valence band and conduction band." Materials
with a suitable band gap prevent so-called tunnel effects of the electrons and
thus the leakage currents caused by them. It is precisely these materials that
the researchers were looking for in their simulations.
Their aim
was to find 2-D materials that can supply a current greater than 3 milliamperes
per micrometer, both as n-type transistors (electron transport) and as p-type
transistors (hole transport), and whose channel length can be as small as 5
nanometres without impairing the switching behavior. "Only when these
conditions are met can transistors based on two-dimensional materials surpass
conventional Si FinFETs," says Luisier.
The ball
is now in the experimental researchers' court
Taking
these aspects into account, the researchers identified 13 possible 2-D
materials with which future transistors could be built and which could also
enable the continuation of Moore's scaling law. Some of these materials are
already known, for example black phosphorus or HfS2, but Luisier emphasizes
that others are completely new—compounds such as Ag2N6 or O6Sb4.
"We
have created one of the largest databases of transistor materials thanks to our
simulations. With these results, we hope to motivate experimentalists working
with 2-D materials to exfoliate new crystals and create next-generation logic
switches," says the ETH professor. The research groups led by Luisier and
Marzari work closely together at the National Centre of Competence in Research
(NCCR) MARVEL and have now published their latest joint results in the journal
ACS Nano. They are confident that transistors based on these new materials
could replace those made of silicon or of the currently popular transition
metal dichalcogenides.