alexei o. orlov department of electrical engineering university of notre dame, in, usa temperature...

21
Alexei O. Orlov Department of Electrical Engineering University of Notre Dame, IN, USA Temperature dependence of locked mode in a Single-Electron Latch

Post on 19-Dec-2015

221 views

Category:

Documents


7 download

TRANSCRIPT

Alexei O. OrlovDepartment of Electrical Engineering

University of Notre Dame, IN, USA

Temperature dependence of

locked mode in a Single-Electron Latch

Notre Dame research team

• Experiment: – Dr. Ravi Kummamuru– Prof. Greg Snider– Prof. Gary Bernstein

• Theory– Mo Liu – Prof. Craig Lent

• Supported by DARPA, NSF, ONR, and W. Keck Foundation

Outline of presentation

Introduction Power Gain in nanodevices Clocked single-electron devices

Bistability for memoryExperiment and simulations

Temperature dependence of bistability and hysteresis loop size

Summary and conclusions

Problems shrinking the current-switch

Electromechanicalrelay

Vacuum tubes Solid-state transistors CMOS IC

New idea

Valve shrinks also – hard to get good on/off

Current becomes small -

resistance becomes high Hard to turn next switchCharge becomes quantized

Power dissipation threatens to melt the chip!

Quantum Dots

How to make a power amplifier using quantum wells?

0 1

0

en

erg

y

xClock

Small Input Applied

Clock Applied

Input Removed

but Information is preserved!

0

Keyes and Landauer, IBM Journal of Res. Dev. 14, 152, 1970

Quantum-dot Cellular Automata

A cell with 4 dots

Tunneling between dots

Polarization P = +1Bit value “1”

2 extra electrons

Polarization P = -1Bit value “0”

Neighboring cells tend to align.Coulomb coupling

Current switch Charge configuration

Old Paradigm New Paradigm

Clocking for single-electron logic:Quantum-dot Cellular Automata and

Parametrons

Clocked QCA : Lent et al., Physics and Computation Conference, Nov. 1994

Parametron: Likharev and Korotkov, Science 273, 763, 1996

Metallic or molecular dots (parametron): Clocking achieved by modulating energy of third state directly

P= +1 P= –1 Null State

Semiconductor dots (QCA):Clocking achieved by modulating barriers between dots

NanoDevices Group

1st evaporation2nd evaporation

Resulting Pattern

Oxidation

Metal “dot” fabrication process

• Aluminum Tunnel junction technology combining E beam lithography with a suspended mask technique and double angle evaporation

• Oxide layer between two layers of Aluminum forms tunnel junctions.

Ultra-sensitive electrometers for QCA

Sub-electron charge detection is needed Single-electron transistors are the best choice

SET electrometers can detect «1% of elementary charge.

GD GE

VG VE

dot electrometer

Single-Electron Latch: a Building Block Layout And Measurement Setup

+VIN

+VIN

+VIN

~

A

Vg

SEM Micrograph of SE latch

MTJ

MTJ D3

D1

D2

+VIN

+VIN

+VIN

1m

Electrometer

MTJ=multiple tunnel junction

The third, middle dot acts as an adjustable barrier for tunneling

(0,0,0) neutral

Animated three-dot SE latch operation

+

(0,0,0) (0,-1,1) switch to “1”

-VCLK-VIN +VINVCLK=0

(0,-1,1) storage of “1” (0,0,0) (0,-1,1) back to neutral

D1 D3

D2

-VIN=0 +VIN=0

Clock signal >> Input signal Clock supplies energy, input defines direction of switching Three states of SE latch: “0” , “1” and “neutral”

Bit can be detected

Experiment: Single-Electron Latch in Action

Weak input signal sets the direction of switching Clock drives the switching

Bistable Switch + Inverter demonstrated Memory Function demonstrated

D1

D2

D3

E1

+VIN

-VIN

VCLK

Latch

SET electrometer

-6

-3

0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

VC

LK (

mV

)V

IN

+ (m

V)

0 2 4 6 8 10

-0.2

0.0

0.2

VD

1 (m

V)

Time (sec)

Switch to “1”

Hold “1”

Switch to “neutral”

Switch to “0”

Hold “0”

Switch to “neutral”

Input

Clock“High

T=100 mK

How temperature affects bistability?

-5 0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

Vdo

t (a.

u.)

VIN

(mV)

region suitable for latch operationBinary “1”

Binary “0”

• 2 level switch with memory = there must be a Hysteresis

• SEL operates fine @ T=100 mK

• Charging energy consideration EC≥10 kT , EC =0.8 meV (9.3 K)

• What is the highest operating temperature?

• Zero K calculations were performed before – Korotkov et al. (1998)– Toth et al. (1999)

-0.5

0.0

0.5

Sweeping input bias

0 0 0

EC

-eV0

eV

EC

EC

EC

-eV

0

eV

EC

EC-eV

0

eV

EC

EC

-e2Cin 0 e2Cin

EC

2.5 50VIN(mV)

VD1(mV)Equilibrium Border

VCLK=0VIN- VIN

+

D1

EC

-000

EC

-eV0

eV

EC

EC

EC

-eV

0

eV

EC

EC-eV

0

eV

EC

EC

-e2Cin 0 e2Cin

EC

Assume Coulomb barrier is the same for hops between adjacent dots

How bistabile behavior scales with temperature?

• Thermal energy surmounts Coulomb barrier

• Hysteresis loop shrinks and then disappears

EC

e×(-V)

0

e×(+V)

EC

kT

kT

kT

-0.5

0.0

0.5

-0.5

0.0

0.5

-6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6-0.5

0.0

0.5

VD

OT (

mV

)V

DO

T (m

V)

VIN

(mV)

VD

OT (

mV

)

Hysteresis loop change with Temperature

T=90 mK

T=160 mK

T=320 mK

Calculations performed using time dependent master equation

for orthodox theory of Coulomb blockade

Bistability area vs kT• Relative loop size V/V0

• Calculations represent ensemble averaging = averaging over multiple scans

• At T >300 mK no bistability is observed

• Bistability disappears for kT~W/30, where W is Coulomb barrier

• At T=>0 (V/V0 )>1, it means that system becomes multistable

0 100 200 3000.0

0.5

1.0

V/V

0

T (mK)

-5 0 5

0.0

0.5

Vdo

t (a.

u.)

VIN

(mV)

V0

V

Summary & Conclusions Temperature dependence of bistable switching in

Single-Electron Latch is studied experimentally Theoretical calculations using time-dependent

master equation are performed Hysteresis loop size vs temperature is studied Bistability disappears as kT reaches EC/30 For 300K operation W~30 kT≈1 eV The real world applications can be implemented

using “molecular assembly line” once technology becomes available

Vc

Metal-dot Single-Electron Latch Molecular Single-Electron Latch

Measured and calculated charging diagrams

• Charging diagram is a 3D plot (gray scale map) of dot potential vs input and clock bias

• White is positive, black is negative

• Calculated data are superimposed with measured

-4 -2 0 2 4

(1,0,-1)

(-1,1,0)(0,1,-1)

(0,-1,1)(1,-1,0)

(0,0,0)

VIN

(mV)

-4 -2 0 2 4-8

-4

0

4

8

V IN (m V)V IN ( m V )

V IN ( m V ) V IN (m V )

VC

(m

V)

VC

(m

V)

VC

(m

V)

VC

(m

V)

B A

DC

[0,0,0]

[0,-1,1] [1,-1,0]

(a ) ( b)

(c) ( d)

P Q P Q

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

-0.2

0.0

0.2

VD

1 (m

V)

VD

3 (m

V)

Time (sec)

-6

0

VC

LO

CK (m

V)

-1.0-0.50.00.51.0

VIN (

mV

)

Single-Electron Latch in Action

• Two electrometers are used

• Both are connected to end dots