2,450 research outputs found

    Semiconductor Nanowire MOSFETs and Applications

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    Semiconductor nanowires have aroused a lot of scientific interest and have been regarded as one of the most promising candidates that would make possible building blocks in future nanoscale devices and integrated circuits. Employing nanowire as metal‐oxide‐semiconductor field‐effect transistor (MOSFET) channel can enable a gate‐surrounding structure allowing an excellent electrostatic gate control over the channel for reducing the short‐channel effects. This chapter introduces the basic physics of semiconductor nanowires and addresses the problem of how to synthesize semiconductor nanowires with low‐cost, high‐efficiency and bottom‐up approaches. Effective integration of nanowires in modern complementary metal‐oxide‐semiconductor (CMOS) technology, specifically in MOSFET devices, and non‐volatile memory applications is also reviewed. By extending the nanowire MOSFET structure into a universal device architecture, various novel semiconductor materials can be investigated. Semiconductor nanowire MOSFETs have been proved to be a strong and useful platform to study the physical and electrical properties of the novel material. In this chapter, we will also review the investigations on topological insulator materials by employing the nanowire field‐effect transistor (FET) device structure

    Redox-Active Molecules for Novel Nonvolatile Memory Applications

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    The continuous complementary metal‐oxide‐semiconductor (CMOS) scaling is reaching fundamental limits imposed by the heat dissipation and short‐channel effects, which will finally stop the increase of integration density and the MOSFET performance predicted by Moore’s law. Molecular technology has been aggressively pursued for decades due to its potential impact on future micro‐/nanoelectronics. Molecules, especially redox‐active molecules, have become attractive due to their intrinsic redox behavior, which provides an excellent basis for low‐power, high‐density, and high‐reliability nonvolatile memory applications. This chapter briefly reviews the development of molecular electronics in the application of nonvolatile memory. From the mechanical motion of molecules in the Langmuir‐Blodgett film to new families of redox‐active molecules, memory devices involving hybrid molecular technology have shown advantageous potential in fast speed, low‐power, and high‐density nonvolatile memory and will lead to promising on‐chip memory as well as future portable electronics applications

    FLASH MEMORY DEVICES WITH METAL FLOATING GATE/METAL NANOCRYSTALS AS THE CHARGE STORAGE LAYER: A STATUS REVIEW

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    Traditional flash memory devices consist of Polysilicon Control Gate (CG) – Oxide-Nitride-Oxide (ONO - Interpoly Dielectric) – Polysilicon Floating Gate (FG) – Silicon Oxide (Tunnel dielectric) – Substrate. The dielectrics have to be scaled down considerably in order to meet the escalating demand for lower write/erase voltages and higher density of cells. But as the floating gate dimensions are scaled down the charge stored in the floating gate leak out more easily via thin tunneling oxide below the floating gate which causes serious reliability issues and the whole amount of stored charge carrying information can be lost. The possible route to eliminate this problem is to use high-k based interpoly dielectric and to replace the polysilicon floating gate with a metal floating gate. At larger physical thickness, these materials have similar capacitance value hence avoiding tunneling effect.  Discrete nanocrystal memory has also been proposed to solve this problem. Due to its high operation speed, excellent scalability and higher reliability it has been shown as a promising candidate for future non-volatile memory applications. This review paper focuses on the recent efforts and research activities related to the fabrication and characterization of non-volatile memory device with metal floating gate/metal nanocrystals as the charge storage layer

    Flash Memory Devices

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    Flash memory devices have represented a breakthrough in storage since their inception in the mid-1980s, and innovation is still ongoing. The peculiarity of such technology is an inherent flexibility in terms of performance and integration density according to the architecture devised for integration. The NOR Flash technology is still the workhorse of many code storage applications in the embedded world, ranging from microcontrollers for automotive environment to IoT smart devices. Their usage is also forecasted to be fundamental in emerging AI edge scenario. On the contrary, when massive data storage is required, NAND Flash memories are necessary to have in a system. You can find NAND Flash in USB sticks, cards, but most of all in Solid-State Drives (SSDs). Since SSDs are extremely demanding in terms of storage capacity, they fueled a new wave of innovation, namely the 3D architecture. Today “3D” means that multiple layers of memory cells are manufactured within the same piece of silicon, easily reaching a terabit capacity. So far, Flash architectures have always been based on "floating gate," where the information is stored by injecting electrons in a piece of polysilicon surrounded by oxide. On the contrary, emerging concepts are based on "charge trap" cells. In summary, flash memory devices represent the largest landscape of storage devices, and we expect more advancements in the coming years. This will require a lot of innovation in process technology, materials, circuit design, flash management algorithms, Error Correction Code and, finally, system co-design for new applications such as AI and security enforcement
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