132,984 research outputs found
Ferroelectric Negative Capacitance Domain Dynamics
Transient negative capacitance effects in epitaxial ferroelectric
Pb(ZrTi)O capacitors are investigated with a focus on the
dynamical switching behavior governed by domain nucleation and growth. Voltage
pulses are applied to a series connection of the ferroelectric capacitor and a
resistor to directly measure the ferroelectric negative capacitance during
switching. A time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau approach is used to investigate the
underlying domain dynamics. The transient negative capacitance is shown to
originate from reverse domain nucleation and unrestricted domain growth.
However, with the onset of domain coalescence, the capacitance becomes positive
again. The persistence of the negative capacitance state is therefore limited
by the speed of domain wall motion. By changing the applied electric field,
capacitor area or external resistance, this domain wall velocity can be varied
predictably over several orders of magnitude. Additionally, detailed insights
into the intrinsic material properties of the ferroelectric are obtainable
through these measurements. A new method for reliable extraction of the average
negative capacitance of the ferroelectric is presented. Furthermore, a simple
analytical model is developed, which accurately describes the negative
capacitance transient time as a function of the material properties and the
experimental boundary conditions
Steep-slope Hysteresis-free Negative Capacitance MoS2 Transistors
The so-called Boltzmann Tyranny defines the fundamental thermionic limit of
the subthreshold slope (SS) of a metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect
transistor (MOSFET) at 60 mV/dec at room temperature and, therefore, precludes
the lowering of the supply voltage and the overall power consumption. Adding a
ferroelectric negative capacitor to the gate stack of a MOSFET may offer a
promising solution to bypassing this fundamental barrier. Meanwhile,
two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors, such as atomically thin transition metal
dichalcogenides (TMDs) due to their low dielectric constant, and ease of
integration in a junctionless transistor topology, offer enhanced electrostatic
control of the channel. Here, we combine these two advantages and demonstrate
for the first time a molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) 2D steep slope transistor with
a ferroelectric hafnium zirconium oxide layer (HZO) in the gate dielectric
stack. This device exhibits excellent performance in both on- and off-states,
with maximum drain current of 510 {\mu}A/{\mu}m, sub-thermionic subthreshold
slope and is essentially hysteresis-free. Negative differential resistance
(NDR) was observed at room temperature in the MoS2 negative capacitance
field-effect-transistors (NC-FETs) as the result of negative capacitance due to
the negative drain-induced-barrier-lowering (DIBL). High on-current induced
self-heating effect was also observed and studied.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figure
Experimental Evidence of Ferroelectric Negative Capacitance in Nanoscale Heterostructures
We report a proof-of-concept demonstration of negative capacitance effect in
a nanoscale ferroelectric-dielectric heterostructure. In a bilayer of
ferroelectric, Pb(Zr0.2Ti0.8)O3 and dielectric, SrTiO3, the composite
capacitance was observed to be larger than the constituent SrTiO3 capacitance,
indicating an effective negative capacitance of the constituent
Pb(Zr0.2Ti0.8)O3 layer. Temperature is shown to be an effective tuning
parameter for the ferroelectric negative capacitance and the degree of
capacitance enhancement in the heterostructure. Landau's mean field theory
based calculations show qualitative agreement with observed effects. This work
underpins the possibility that by replacing gate oxides by ferroelectrics in
MOSFETs, the sub threshold slope can be lowered below the classical limit (60
mV/decade)
Negative quantum capacitance in graphene nanoribbons with lateral gates
We present numerical simulations of the capacitive coupling between graphene
nanoribbons of various widths and gate electrodes in different configurations.
We compare the influence of lateral metallic or graphene side gate structures
on the overall back gate capacitive coupling. Most interestingly, we find a
complex interplay between quantum capacitance effects in the graphene
nanoribbon and the lateral graphene side gates, giving rise to an
unconventional negative quantum capacitance. The emerging non-linear capacitive
couplings are investigated in detail. The experimentally relevant relative
lever arm, the ratio between the coupling of the different gate structures, is
discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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