Ultrashort Channel Silicon
Nanowire Transistors with
Nickel Silicide Source/Drain Contacts
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Abstract
We demonstrate the shortest transistor channel length
(17 nm) fabricated
on a vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) grown silicon nanowire
(NW) by a controlled reaction with Ni leads on an in situ transmission
electron microscope (TEM) heating stage at a moderate temperature
of 400 °C. NiSi<sub>2</sub> is the leading phase, and the silicide–silicon
interface is an atomically sharp type-A interface. At such channel
lengths, high maximum on-currents of 890 (μA/μm) and a
maximum transconductance of 430 (μS/μm) were obtained,
which pushes forward the performance of bottom-up Si NW Schottky barrier
field-effect transistors (SB-FETs). Through accurate control over
the silicidation reaction, we provide a systematic study of channel
length dependent carrier transport in a large number of SB-FETs with
channel lengths in the range of 17 nm to 3.6 μm. Our device
results corroborate with our transport simulations and reveal a characteristic
type of short channel effects in SB-FETs, both in on- and off-state,
which is different from that in conventional MOSFETs, and that limits
transport parameter extraction from SB-FETs using conventional field-effect
transconductance measurements