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Ballistic Devices Vikram Jagannathan Graduate Student, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY-14620, USA – [email protected] Abstract - With a brief introduction to ballistic phenomenon, the theory, fabrication, working and plausible applications of some ballistic devices are presented. Index – Heterostructure semiconductor, 2DEG, Electron Mobility, Mesoscopic Structure, Ballistic Transport, Ballistic Devices I. INTRODUCTION TO BALLISTIC PHENOMENON The ideal basis for future electronics would be a scalable solid-state transistor with much higher speed than III-V FETs and lower energy dissipation than current CMOS transistors. In addition, it should utilize common materials and operate at room temperature. One of the most important physical parameters to describe the quality of a piece of semiconductor material is the electron scattering length. Also referred to as the mean-free path, it stands for the average distance between the randomly distributed scatterers in the material, such as lattice defects, impurities, and phonons. The electron mean-free path is typically a few nanometers in silicon and about 100–200 nm in high-quality compound semiconductors such as GaAs [1]. It is known that the electrical resistance of a semiconductor device is closely associated with the scattering length. Conventional semiconductor devices are much larger than the electron scattering length. As a result, electrons have to encounter a large number of random scattering events called Coulomb scattering, as shown in Fig. 1, to travel from one device lead to another. II. TWO DIMENSIONAL ELECTRON GAS A two Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) is a gas of electrons free to move in two dimensions, but tightly confined in the third. In a heterostructure semiconductor made of GaAs/AlGaAs, the conduction bands of GaAs and AlGaAs are offset from each other and this allows electron to collect in the GaAs but not in the AlGaAs. Thus they distort the conduction band into the shape shown in Fig. 3, where there is a triangular "well" at the interface, and this goes slightly below the Fermi energy so that electrons can collect there. This well is so narrow that all the electrons there behave as quantummechanical waves, forming quantized energy levels for motion in that direction. The only degrees of freedom for the electrons are in the plane of the interface. Thus in the heterojunction, the 2DEG is spatially separated from the ionised donors by an undoped spacer layer [3, 4]. This greatly reduces impurity scattering and so increases the mean free paths of the electrons in the 2DEG layer thereby increasing the electron mobility. Fig. 3. Band diagram of 2DEG in hetrostructure semiconductor III. BALLISTIC DEVICES Scattering length Fig. 1. Electron transport in macroscopic devices Advanced semiconductor technologies have allowed the fabrication of mesoscopic devices that are smaller than the electron scattering length. In such devices, electrons may travel from one electric lead to another without encountering any scattering event from the randomly distributed scatterers. Instead, the electrons are scattered only at the device boundaries, that is, moving like billiard balls as in Fig. 2. Such electron transport is referred to as ballistic transport which could operate in terahertz regime [2]. ~ Microns or less Fig. 2. Electron transport in mesoscopic devices The ballistic transport can be used to construct ballistic devices and circuitry operating at room temperatures that are very different from conventional circuitry. It has been expected that devices based on ballistic electron transport have superb performance. Since electrons are free from random scattering events, ballistic electron devices may have a very high intrinsic working speed and a quick response. Further, the strongly temperature dependent phonon scatterings, which in some cases lead to serious degradation in device performance in a traditional electron transport device, do not exist in a ballistic device by its nature. Therefore, ballistic devices in general are less temperature dependent [1]. Many of the new concepts are based on the fact that the only scatterings that the ballistic electrons experience are those from the designed device boundaries. By simply tailoring the boundary of a ballistic device, the electron transport can be, to a large extent, modified and controlled. The parameters for this design are based on simulations using a Newtonian billiard-ball model [2]. IV. BALLISTIC RECTIFIER The best introduction to the room temperature ballistic devices is to review experiments on a related device called the "ballistic rectifier" developed by Song et al. in [1], as shown in Fig. 4. The ballistic rectifier can be understood, by a simple concept; that the electrons in the 2DEG behave as if they were classical Newtonian charged particles. They respond to electromagnetic fields; but they otherwise travel in straight paths until they encounter obstacles, from which they are reflected. The asymmetric triangular structure, seen in Fig. 4a, deflects the electrons downward and this causes the rectification. Fig. 6. Schematic of the mesoscopic ballistic quantum point contact detector In the QPC detector, as in Fig. 6, the propagating particles are electrons which move ballistically through a short onedimensional constriction formed between the two electrodes of the QPC. The output of the QPC detector is the electric current I driven by the voltage difference V between the electrodes. The current depends on the electron transmission probability, and as a result, contains information about the state of the system. In view of quantum computation, ballistic QPCs may be used as readout devices for the state of a qubit. VI. BALLISTIC Y-BRANCH SWITCH Fig. 4. Image of the a) Ballistic rectifier and b) Bridge rectifier In the experiment, an AC or RF source is connected across the left and right contacts. The experimental result, as shown in Fig 5 is that a DC voltage is developed across the top and the bottom contacts; in other words, rectification is performed. A device of special interest is an electron Y-Branch Switch (YBS) [6]. The semiconductor version of YBS has a narrow electron waveguide patterned into a “Y” configuration with one source and two drain terminals. A lateral electric field perpendicular to the direction of electric current in the source channel steers the injected electron wave into either of the two output drain arms. Fig. 7 shows an atomic force micrograph of a YBS device. Fig. 7. Atomic force micrograph of a YBS with neck width of 76nm Fig. 5. The output voltage between the lower and upper leads VLU as a function of the input current through the source and drain leads ISD V. MESOSCOPIC BALLISTIC DETECTORS Current interest in solid-state quantum information processing motivates development of mesoscopic solid-state structures that can serve both as simple quantum systems and as detectors. Majority of the mesoscopic detectors use, as their operating principle, the ability of a measured system to control the transport of some particles between the two reservoirs (sometimes source and drain). The information about the state of the system is then contained in the magnitude of the particle current between the reservoirs which serves as the detector output. In the most direct form, this principle is implemented in the Quantum Point Contact (QPC) detector [5]. As an advantage over the switching devices harnessing the field effect, the electrons need not be stopped and reflected by a barrier. As a consequence extremely fast switching times and low power consumption has been predicted [6]. For terahertz operations, the semiconductor system in which the YBS is fabricated must have the electron mean free path longer, relative to the junction length of the YBS drain-source region. The 2DEG channel in heterostructure semiconductors increases the mean free path of the electrons, making YBS to operate in the ballistic regime. The YBS can be directly used as ballistic logic gates. Simulations have shown that YBS can be cascaded, i.e. the output of one YBS can act as the input to the controlling gates of a subsequent YBS [7]. In the same paper it was also shown that fan-out is possible. VII Conventional Ballistic Transistors A. Heterojunction Bipolar Transistor The Heterojunction Bipolar Transistor (HBT) is an improvement of the Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT) that can handle signals of very high frequencies up to several hundred GHz. The principal difference between the BJT and HBT is the use of differing semiconductor materials for the emitter and base regions, creating a heterojunction. The effect is to limit the injection of holes into the base region, since the potential barrier in the valence band is so large. Unlike BJT technology, this allows high doping to be used in the base, forming 2DEG layer, creating higher electron mobility while maintaining gain. HBT from InP/InGaAs was demonstrated to run at a speed of 710 gigahertz [8]. Among other HBT applications are optoelectronic integrated circuits and mixed signal circuits such as analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters. B. High Electron Mobility Transistor A High Electron Mobility Transistor (HEMT) is a field effect transistor with the 2DEG in a heterojunction as the channel instead of an n-doped region [9]. This gives the channel very low resistance or high electron mobility. A commonly used combination is GaAs and AlGaAs with a thin layer of InGaAs as shown in Fig. 8. Fig. 9. Sketch of the ballistic deflection transistor This ballistic deflection magnifies the effect of the gated nonlinear conduction and is responsible for the gain of the BDT. A small deviation at the gate results in a large deflection at the output. This constitutes the amplification action of the BDT. IX. CONCLUSION This paper reviews a novel and unique concept of electronic devices capable of working at high gigahertz and terahertz frequencies at room temperature. These devices use the ballistic transport for operation. It also consumes very low power and operates with very low noise levels and is thus suitable for a multitude of applications like high speed processors, RF identification, wireless fidelity, which will revolutionize modern electronics. REFERENCES Fig. 8. Cross section of an AlGaAs HEMT Major application areas are microwave and millimeter wave communications, radar and radio astronomy. VIII. BALLISTIC DEFLECTION TRANSISTOR The proposed concept for the Ballistic Deflection Transistor (BDT) is shown in the sketch Fig. 9 [10]. The white areas represent 2DEG with high electrical conductivity, with dimensions comparable to the mean free path, while the black areas are zero conductivity. The ballistic transport in the 2DEG layer provides the actual transistor nonlinearity. A bias voltage applied at Vdd accelerates electrons from Vss towards the central junction of the BDT. A small gate voltage modifies the path of the electrons towards the right or the left as desired. These electrons are then ballistically deflected from the central triangular feature into one or the other output channels. [1] A. M. Song, “Room-Temperature Ballistic Nanodevices”, Encyclopedia of nanoscience and Nanotechnology, X, 1 (2004). [2] S. Datta, Electronic Transport in Mesoscopic Systems (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995). [3] http://www.warwick.ac.uk/~phsbm/2deg.htm [4] http://www.sp.phy.cam.ac.uk/SPWeb/research/wafer.html [5] D. V. Averin, “Mesoscopic Quantum Measurements”, available online at http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0603802 [6] E. Forsberg: "Reversible logic based on electron waveguide Ybranch switches", Nanotechnology 15, S298 (2004) [7] T. Palm, L. Thylen, 0. Nilsson, and C. Svensson, “Quantum interference devices and field-effect transistors: A switch energy comparison”, J. Appl. Phys. 74, 687 (1993) [8] Wikipedia contributors, Heterojunction bipolar transistor, (Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2006), http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Heterojunction_bipolar_tran sistor&oldid=67184480 [9] Wikipedia contributors, HEMT, (Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2006), http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=HEMT&oldid=93872590 [10] Q. Diduck, M. Margala, and M. J. Feldman, “A Terahertz Transistor Based on Geometrical Deflection of Ballistic Current”, IEEE Microwave Symposium Digest, 345 (2006)