A heteroepitaxial perovskite metal-base transistor
Author(s) -
Takeaki Yajima,
Yasuyuki Hikita,
Harold Y. Hwang
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nature materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 14.344
H-Index - 483
eISSN - 1476-4660
pISSN - 1476-1122
DOI - 10.1038/nmat2946
Subject(s) - perovskite (structure) , heterojunction , electronics , materials science , transistor , optoelectronics , silicon , field effect transistor , oxide , bipolar junction transistor , dipole , engineering physics , nanotechnology , electrical engineering , voltage , chemistry , physics , crystallography , metallurgy , engineering , organic chemistry
'More than Moore' captures a concept for overcoming limitations in silicon electronics by incorporating new functionalities in the constituent materials. Perovskite oxides are candidates because of their vast array of physical properties in a common structure. They also enable new electronic devices based on strongly-correlated electrons. The field effect transistor and its derivatives have been the principal oxide devices investigated thus far, but another option is available in a different geometry: if the current is perpendicular to the interface, the strong internal electric fields generated at back-to-back heterojunctions can be used for oxide electronics, analogous to bipolar transistors. Here we demonstrate a perovskite heteroepitaxial metal-base transistor operating at room temperature, enabled by interface dipole engineering. Analysis of many devices quantifies the evolution from hot-electron to permeable-base behaviour. This device provides a platform for incorporating the exotic ground states of perovskite oxides, as well as novel electronic phases at their interfaces.
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