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Doping-Free Complementary Logic Gates Enabled by Two-Dimensional Polarity-Controllable Transistors
Author(s) -
Giovanni V. Resta,
Yashwanth Balaji,
Dennis Lin,
Iuliana Radu,
Francky Catthoor,
PierreEmmanuel Gaillardon,
Giovanni De Micheli
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.8b02739
Subject(s) - tungsten diselenide , logic gate , transistor , nand gate , materials science , ambipolar diffusion , optoelectronics , pass transistor logic , polarity (international relations) , doping , semiconductor , nanotechnology , and gate , electrical engineering , physics , electron , chemistry , transition metal , voltage , engineering , biochemistry , quantum mechanics , cell , catalysis
Atomically thin two-dimensional (2D) materials belonging to transition metal dichalcogenides, due to their physical and electrical properties, are an exceptional vector for the exploration of next-generation semiconductor devices. Among them, due to the possibility of ambipolar conduction, tungsten diselenide (WSe 2 ) provides a platform for the efficient implementation of polarity-controllable transistors. These transistors use an additional gate, named polarity gate, that, due to the electrostatic doping of the Schottky junctions, provides a device-level dynamic control of their polarity, that is, n- or p-type. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a complete doping-free standard cell library realized on WSe 2 without the use of either chemical or physical doping. We show a functionally complete family of complementary logic gates (INV, NAND, NOR, 2-input XOR, 3-input XOR, and MAJ) and, due to the reconfigurable capabilities of the single devices, achieve the realization of highly expressive logic gates, such as exclusive-OR (XOR) and majority (MAJ), with fewer transistors than possible in conventional complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor logic. Our work shows a path to enable doping-free low-power electronics on 2D semiconductors, going beyond the concept of unipolar physically doped devices, while suggesting a road to achieve higher computational densities in two-dimensional electronics.

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