61 research outputs found
Physical Insights of Low Thermal Expansion Coefficient Electrode Stress Effect on Hafnia-Based Switching Speed
In this report, we investigate the effect of low coefficient of thermal
expansion (CTE) metals on the operating speed of hafnium-based oxide
capacitance. We found that the cooling process of low CTE metals during rapid
thermal annealing (RTA) generates in-plane tensile stresses in the film, This
facilitates an increase in the volume fraction of the o-phase and significantly
improves the domain switching speed. However, no significant benefit was
observed at electric fields less than 1 MV/cm. This is because at low voltage
operation, the defective resistance (dead layer) within the interface prevents
electron migration and the increased RC delay. Minimizing interface defects
will be an important key to extending endurance and retention
Stamp transferred suspended graphene mechanical resonators for radio-frequency electrical readout
We present a simple micromanipulation technique to transfer suspended
graphene flakes onto any substrate and to assemble them with small localized
gates into mechanical resonators. The mechanical motion of the graphene is
detected using an electrical, radio-frequency (RF) reflection readout scheme
where the time-varying graphene capacitor reflects a RF carrier at f=5-6 GHz
producing modulation sidebands at f +/- fm. A mechanical resonance frequency up
to fm=178 MHz is demonstrated. We find both hardening/softening Duffing effects
on different samples, and obtain a critical amplitude of ~40 pm for the onset
of nonlinearity in graphene mechanical resonators. Measurements of the quality
factor of the mechanical resonance as a function of DC bias voltage Vdc
indicate that dissipation due to motion-induced displacement currents in
graphene electrode is important at high frequencies and large Vdc
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