By
depositing gold (Au) and Indium (In) contacts, researchers create two crucial
types of quantum dot transistors on the same substrate, opening the door to a
host of innovative electronics.
Researchers
at Los Alamos National Laboratory and their collaborators from the University
of California, Irvine have created fundamental electronic building blocks out
of tiny structures known as quantum dots and used them to assemble functional
logic circuits. The innovation promises a cheaper and manufacturing-friendly
approach to complex electronic devices that can be fabricated in a chemistry
laboratory via simple, solution-based techniques, and offer long-sought
components for a host of innovative devices.
“Potential
applications of the new approach to electronic devices based on non-toxic
quantum dots include printable circuits, flexible displays, lab-on-a-chip
diagnostics, wearable devices, medical testing, smart implants, and
biometrics,” said Victor Klimov, a physicist specializing in semiconductor
nanocrystals at Los Alamos and lead author on a paper announcing the new
results in the October 19 issue of Nature Communications.
For
decades, microelectronics has relied on extra-high purity silicon processed in
a specially created clean-room environment. Recently, silicon-based
microelectronics has been challenged by several alternative technologies that
allow for fabricating complex electronic circuits outside a clean room, via
inexpensive, readily accessible chemical techniques. Colloidal semiconductor
nanoparticles made with chemistry methods in much less stringent environments
are one such emerging technology. Due to their small size and unique properties
directly controlled by quantum mechanics, these particles are dubbed quantum
dots.
A
colloidal quantum dot consists of a semiconductor core covered with organic
molecules. As a result of this hybrid nature, they combine the advantages of
well-understood traditional semiconductors with the chemical versatility of
molecular systems. These properties are attractive for realizing new types of
flexible electronic circuits that could be printed onto virtually any surface
including plastic, paper, and even human skin. This capability could benefit
numerous areas including consumer electronics, security, digital signage and
medical diagnostics.
A key
element of electronic circuitry is a transistor that acts as a switch of
electrical current activated by applied voltage. Usually transistors come in
pairs of n- and p-type devices that control flows of negative and positive
electrical charges, respectively. Such pairs of complementary transistors are
the cornerstone of the modern CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor)
technology, which enables microprocessors, memory chips, image sensors and
other electronic devices.
The first
quantum dot transistors were demonstrated almost two decades ago. However,
integrating complementary n- and p-type devices within the same quantum dot
layer remained a long-standing challenge. In addition, most of the efforts in
this area have focused on nanocrystals based on lead and cadmium. These
elements are highly toxic heavy metals, which greatly limits practical utility
of the demonstrated devices.
The team
of Los Alamos researchers and their collaborators from the University of
California, Irvine have demonstrated that by using copper indium selenide
(CuInSe2) quantum dots devoid of heavy metals they were able to address both
the problem of toxicity and simultaneously achieve straightforward integration
of n- and p-transistors in the same quantum dot layer. As a proof of practical
utility of the developed approach, they created functional circuits that
performed logical operations.
The
innovation that Klimov and colleagues are presenting in their new paper allows
them to define p- and n-type transistors by applying two different types of
metal contacts (gold and indium, respectively). They completed the devices by
depositing a common quantum dot layer on top of the pre-patterned contacts.
“This approach permits straightforward integration of an arbitrary number of
complementary p- and n-type transistors into the same quantum dot layer
prepared as a continuous, un-patterned film via standard spin-coating,” said
Klimov.