144 research outputs found
Process Optimization and Downscaling of a Single Electron Single Dot Memory
This paper presents the process optimization of a single-electron nanoflash
electron memory. Self-aligned single dot memory structures have been fabricated
using a wet anisotropic oxidation of a silicon nanowire. One of the main issue
was to clarify the process conditions for the dot formation. Based on the
process modeling, the influence of various parameters (oxidation temperature,
nanowire shape) has been investigated. The necessity of a sharp compromise
between these different parameters to ensure the presence of the memory dot has
been established. In order to propose an aggressive memory cell, the
downscaling of the device has been carefully studied. Scaling rules show that
the size of the original device could be reduced by a factor of 2. This point
has been previously confirmed by the realization of single-electron memory
devices
The influence of residual oxidizing impurities on the synthesis of graphene by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition
The growth of graphene on copper by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor
deposition in a system free of pumping equipment is investigated. The emphasis
is put on the necessity of hydrogen presence during graphene synthesis and
cooling. In the absence of hydrogen during the growth step or cooling at slow
rate, weak carbon coverage, consisting mostly of oxidized and amorphous carbon,
is obtained on the copper catalyst. The oxidation originates from the
inevitable occurrence of residual oxidizing impurities in the reactor's
atmosphere. Graphene with appreciable coverage can be grown within the
vacuum-free furnace only upon admitting hydrogen during the growth step. After
formation, it is preserved from the destructive effect of residual oxidizing
contaminants once exposure at high temperature is minimized by fast cooling or
hydrogen flow. Under these conditions, micrometer-sized hexagon-shaped graphene
domains of high structural quality are achieved.Comment: Accepted in Carbo
Graphene-coated holey metal films: tunable molecular sensing by surface plasmon resonance
We report on the enhancement of surface plasmon resonances in a holey
bidimensional grating of subwavelength size, drilled in a gold thin film coated
by a graphene sheet. The enhancement originates from the coupling between
charge carriers in graphene and gold surface plasmons. The main plasmon
resonance peak is located around 1.5 microns. A lower constraint on the
gold-induced doping concentration of graphene is specified and the interest of
this architecture for molecular sensing is also highlighted.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Final version. Published in Applied Physics
Letter
Low temperature tunneling current enhancement in silicide/Si Schottky contacts with nanoscale barrier width
The low temperature electrical behavior of adjacent silicide/Si Schottky
contacts with or without dopant segregation is investigated. The electrical
characteristics are very well modeled by thermionic-field emission for
non-segregated contacts separated by micrometer-sized gaps. Still, an excess of
current occurs at low temperature for short contact separations or
dopant-segregated contacts when the voltage applied to the device is
sufficiently high. From two-dimensional self-consistent non-equilibrium Green's
function simulations, the dependence of the Schottky barrier profile on the
applied voltage, unaccounted for in usual thermionic-field emission models, is
found to be the source of this deviation
Very low effective Schottky barrier height for erbium disilicide contacts on n-Si through arsenic segregation
The segregation of As+ ions implanted into thin Er films deposited on n-Si
substrates is studied after ErSi2-x formation. The same lowering of the
effective Schottky barrier height (SBH) below 0.12 eV is obtained at moderate
annealing temperatures, regardless of the redistribution of As dopants at the
ErSi2-x/Si interface. On the other hand, if the implanted dose is slightly
enhanced, the annealing temperature required to reach sub-0.12-eV effective SBH
can be further reduced. This process enables the formation of very low
effective SBH ErSi2-x/n-Si contacts with a low thermal budget
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