Field-effect transistors with parallel arrays of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons

ORAL

Abstract

Bottom-up synthesized graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) have promising properties for high-performance field-effect transistors (FETs). We have demonstrated FETs with individual, randomly oriented 9-atom wide GNRs that exhibit high on-current and on-off ratio. However, it is challenging to improve the device yield and to control the number of GNRs in the channel due to the random orientation of the GNRs. In order to demonstrate a practical FET for digital logic applications, the current of the FET must scale with electrode width and the device yield must be improved to 100%. Here, we demonstrate FETs with parallel arrays of GNRs grown on Au(788) crystals and transferred via a bubble transfer technique. We observe greatly improved device yield and compare the electrical characteristics of these devices to other devices incorporating dense, parallel arrays of 1-dimensional semiconductors.

Presenters

  • Juan Llinas

    • University of California
    • EECS, UC Berkeley

Authors

  • Juan Llinas

    • University of California
    • EECS, UC Berkeley
  • Gabriela Borin Barin

    • Empa
    • Surfaces laboratory, EMPA
  • Kyunghoon Lee

    • University of California
    • Physics, UC Berkeley
  • Shuang Wu

    • University of California
    • EECS, UC Berkeley
  • Akimitsu Narita

    • Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
  • Klaus Müllen

    • Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
  • Roman Fasel

    • Empa
    • Surfaces laboratory, EMPA
  • Jeffrey Bokor

    • University of California
    • EECS, UC Berkeley
    • Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley
    • EECS, University of California Berkeley