* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Nanoelectronics - the GMU ECE Department
Topological quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Quantum state wikipedia , lookup
Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation wikipedia , lookup
Enrico Fermi wikipedia , lookup
Elementary particle wikipedia , lookup
Tight binding wikipedia , lookup
Jack Sarfatti wikipedia , lookup
Relativistic quantum mechanics wikipedia , lookup
Electron configuration wikipedia , lookup
James Franck wikipedia , lookup
Wave–particle duality wikipedia , lookup
Hydrogen atom wikipedia , lookup
Hidden variable theory wikipedia , lookup
Quantum electrodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Canonical quantization wikipedia , lookup
Atomic theory wikipedia , lookup
Renormalization wikipedia , lookup
History of quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Electron scattering wikipedia , lookup
Nanoelectronics Part II Many Electron Phenomena Chapter 10 Nanowires, Ballistic Transport, and Spin Transport [email protected]@2015.3 1 Nickel nanowires [email protected]@2015.3 Si nanowires 2 A review of nanowire technology Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 3 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 4 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 5 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 6 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 7 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 8 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 9 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 10 [email protected]@2015.3 11 [email protected]@2015.3 12 [email protected]@2015.3 13 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 14 [email protected]@2015.3 15 Courtesy from C. Lieber “Nanowires: A Platform for Nanoscience Nanotechnology” [email protected]@2015.3 16 [email protected]@2015.3 17 [email protected]@2015.3 18 [email protected]@2015.3 19 [email protected]@2015.3 20 [email protected]@2015.3 21 [email protected]@2015.3 22 [email protected]@2015.3 23 10.1 Classical and Semi-classical Transport 10.1.1 classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model • A particle has 3 degrees of freedom Mean thermal velocity [email protected]@2015.3 24 10.1.1 classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model At T = 0 K, vT=0 • At room tem.: • However, this motion is random and does not result in net current. • Now consider applying a voltage [email protected]@2015.3 25 10.1.1 classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model (Drude model) will velocity increase infinitely as time increases? • Collision between electrons and material lattice • Mean time between collision is τ It is called relaxation time [email protected]@2015.3 26 10.1.1 classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model • Therefore, velocity is accelerated from 0 to τ: • More precisely, mean time between collision and momentum relaxation time are different. • µ is electrical mobility [email protected]@2015.3 27 10.1.1 classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model • For example, for copper at room temperature, τ=2.47×10-14 s, E = 1V/m: vd = 4.35×10-3 m/s • This is much smaller than thermal velocity: ~ 105 m/s. • Despite the small value of drift velocity, electrical signals propagate as electromagnetic waves at the speed of light. (EM signal propagates in the medium exterior to the wire, such air or other dielectric insulation.) [email protected]@2015.3 28 10.1.1 Classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model • Classical current density • So • Conductivity: • For electron and hole: [email protected]@2015.3 29 10.1.1 classical theory of conduction – free electron gas model • For copper: • Velocity: [email protected]@2015.3 30 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model • Classical model is simply a classical free electron gas model with the addition of collisions. • It is better to use quantum physics principles. • We should consider Fermi velocity. All momentum states within Fermi sphere are occupied, and outside the Fermi sphere are empty [email protected]@2015.3 31 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model [email protected]@2015.3 32 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model • For copper: • Fermi velocity is many orders of magnitude larger than drift velocity, in general. It is also randomly directed in the absence of an applied field. • From the viewpoint of Fermi surface: [email protected]@2015.3 33 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model • The increase in momentum in a time increment dt is • Fermi gas model: use Fermi velocity rather than thermal velocity to describe conduction [email protected]@2015.3 34 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model [email protected]@2015.3 35 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model • Mean-free path: the mean distance an electron travels before a collision with the lattice. • Copper: • Using Fermi velocity is better than thermal velocity, in fact, the electron can pass through a perfect periodic lattice without scattering, where the effect of lattice merely leads to the use of effective mass. [email protected]@2015.3 36 10.1.2 Semiclassical theory of electrical conduction – Fermi gas model • Mobility is a strong function of temperature. • As T decreases, mobility increases due to diminished phonon scattering. • At sufficiently low temperature, scattering is mostly due to impurities. • For relatively pure copper at 4K, it is possible to obtain long τ = 1 ns. [email protected]@2015.3 37 10.1.3 Classical Resistance and Conductance a b [email protected]@2015.3 38 10.1.3 Classical Resistance and Conductance • Ohm’s law • If S = w1 X w2 and length L, field E is uniform throughout the material with magnitude ϵ [email protected]@2015.3 39 10.1.3 Classical Resistance and Conductance • For a two-dimensional flat wire having length L and width w: • where σs is the sheet conductivity in S (not S/m). [email protected]@2015.3 40 10.1.4 Conductivity of Metallic Nanowiresthe influence of Wire Radius • Wire resistance increases with decreasing radius • For radius between 1-20nm, the wire resistance increases significantly, due to scattering from wire surface, from grain boundaries, defects/impurities. • For 5-10 nm, a quantum wire model that accounts for transverse quantization is needed. [email protected]@2015.3 41 10.1.4 Conductivity of Metallic Nanowiresthe influence of Wire Radius As the Cu nanowire was being oxidized, the Cu became more and more like Cu2O and the wire acted like a p-type semiconductor. [email protected]@2015.3 42 10.2 Ballistic Transport • When L is large, conductivity is derived assuming a large number of electrons and a large number of collision between electrons and phonons, impurities, imperfections. • As L becomes very small L << Lm , mean free path, will the classical model of resistance works? • When L << Lm , one would expect that no collisions would take place – rendering the classical collisionbased model useless [email protected]@2015.3 43 10.2 Ballistic Transport • At very small length scales, electron transport occurs ballistically. It is very important in nanoscopic devices. [email protected]@2015.3 44 10.2.1 Electron Collisions and Length Scales • An electron can collide with an object such that there is no change in energy – elastic collision. another type, the energy of electron changes – inelastic collision. • L is system length • Lm is mean free path • Lφ is the length over which an electron can travel before having an inelastic collision. It is also called phase-coherence length, since it is the length over which an electron wavefunction retains its coherence (i.e., its phase memory) [email protected]@2015.3 45 10.2.1 Electron Collisions and Length Scales • So, inelastic collisions are called dephasing events. Lφ is about tens – hundreds nm • During ballistic transport, no momentum or phase relaxation. Thus, in a ballistic material, the electron wavefunction can be obtain from Schrodinger’s equation. [email protected]@2015.3 46 10.2.2 Ballistic Transport Model • The reservoir is large and it energy states form essentially a continuum: infinite source and sink for electrons. reservoir reservoir [email protected]@2015.3 47 10.2.2 Ballistic Transport Model • The ballistic channel and subbands y and z dimensions are small [email protected]@2015.3 48 10.2.2 Ballistic Transport Model • Let w1=w2=w • The total number of subbands at or below the Fermi energy: We assume: [email protected]@2015.3 49 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • Fermi energy Left reservoir: EF – eV Right reservoir: EF the electrons in the wire have wavefunction: With an associated probabilistic current density [email protected]@2015.3 50 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance Using: [email protected]@2015.3 51 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • Assume the wavefunction can be represented by a traveling state, indicating left-to-right (positive k) movement of electron Such that: Because spin up and down: [email protected]@2015.3 52 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • We don’t know if a certain state will be filled or not. The probability that the electron makes it into the channel from the left reservoir, out of the channel into the right reservoir must be considered. – Fermi-Dirac probability: f(E, Ef - eV, T) and f(E, FF, T) – Transmission probability: Tn(E) [email protected]@2015.3 53 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • Current flowing from left to right • Right to left [email protected]@2015.3 54 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance Total current flowing Because [email protected]@2015.3 55 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • So, the temperature-dependent conductance: • At very low temperatures [email protected]@2015.3 56 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • If there are N electronic channels, and the transmission probability is one for each channel. This is Landauer formula Since N is number of conduction channels Resistance of each channel is [email protected]@2015.3 57 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance reservoir reservoir reservoir reservoir [email protected]@2015.3 58 [email protected]@2015.3 59 10.2.3 Quantum Resistance and Conductance • Note: Landauer formula can also be applied to tunnel junctions T(EF) is the transmission coefficient obtained from solving Schrodinger’s equation. • As T increases, the observed quantization tends to vanish. (kBT becomes large) [email protected]@2015.3 60 [email protected]@2015.3 61 10.2.4 Origin of the Quantum Resistance • The resistance quantum, R0, arises from perfect (infinitely wide) reservoirs in contact with a single electronic channel (i.e., a very narrow physical channel). • Indeed, the resistance of a ballistic channel is length independent, as long as L << Lm, Lφ • Ballistic metal nanowires have been shown to be capable of carrying current densities much higher than bulk metals, due to absence of heating in the ballistic channel itself. [email protected]@2015.3 62