Periodic Reporting for period 1 - AttoSwitch (Dirac cold-source transistor technologies towards attojoule switching)
Berichtszeitraum: 2024-01-01 bis 2025-06-30
AttoSwitch, started in January 2024, aims to develop a novel cold-source transistor technology that uses the intrinsically cold carrier distribution of Dirac semimetals to overcome the Boltzmann limit and achieve an ultra low switching energy of a few attojoules. The main objective is to develop a scalable Dirac transistor (DFET) technology based on large area integration of 2D and 3D Dirac materials, e.g. graphene and CoSi, and the realization of high-performance device demonstrators at technologically relevant length scales. Key demonstrators are based on graphene integrated with MoS2 channels, as well as novel work on 3D Dirac semimetals for integration of cold-source in advanced transistor technologies.
Our methodology includes development of device process modules and extensive material and device characterization. Systematic modeling using new simulation frameworks for DFETs at different levels of abstraction, plays a key part to steer material selection, support optimized design of DFET architectures, interpret experiments, accurately predict performance, assess technology maturity, benchmark and provide a road map for the technology.
Advanced modelling and simulation frameworks for DFETs and contacts have been developed at different levels of abstraction (from atomistic ab-initio to TCAD and semi-analytical), supporting the project with a portfolio of simulation tools, providing remarkable insights on expected material performance, suggesting new or optimized device structures, enabling to pinpoint some of the fundamental physical limitations.
First versions of processes to deposit/grow, etch, and integrate 2D and 3D Dirac materials with semiconductors have been developed. Processing windows to limit the detrimental effects of PMMA residues, layer delamination, and cleaning procedures have been tested, eventually leading to the successful fabrication of: 1) prototypical Dirac junctions of 2D and 3D Dirac materials with semiconductors; 2) functional transistors with Graphene/MoS2. These devices are currently under scrutiny to identify the limiting factors toward the observation of sub-thermal subthreshold swing. Fabrication of more complex demonstrators with scaled gate dielectric is ongoing.
Advanced TEM/STEM characterizations have provided a wealth of morphological, compositional, structural, and electrostatic information on the newly fabricated 2D and 3D Dirac material samples, thanks to an intense and fruitful collaboration among partners. Valuable insights have been achieved to understand the effectiveness of the processing steps in providing high quality graphene and MoS2 layers, and CoSn crystals. Defect analysis has started and will be further pursued in the future.
Several peer-reviewed journal and conference papers have been published. A very successful inter-EU-project workshop has been organized in Aachen to foster dissemination, networking, and collaboration at European level.
Ab-initio quantum transport simulations have shown that Dirac FETs with overlapped and edge-to-edge Graphene/MoS2 junctions and other material combinations can achieve steep slope operation in both nMOS and pMOS.
Electron decoherence due to phonon scattering has been identified as a major limiting factor toward subthermal swing and with the desired performance targets. Design windows to mitigate this effect have been identified for different combinations of materials.