Table of Contents
Cover
Series
Title
The Author
Copyright
Dedication
Preface
1 Introduction and Review of Electronic Technology
1.1 Introduction: Functions of Electronic Technology
References
2 From Electronics to Nanoelectronics: Particles, Waves, and Schrödinger’s Equation
2.1 Transition from Diffusive Motion of Electron Fluid to Quantum Behavior of Single Electrons
2.2 Particle (Quantum) Nature of Matter: Photons, Electrons, Atoms, and Molecules
2.3 Particle–Wave Nature of Light and Matter, De Broglie Formulas
λ
=
h
/
p
,
E
=
hv
2.4 Maxwell’s Equations
2.5 The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
2.6 Schrödinger Equation, Quantum States and Energies, Barrier Tunneling
2.7 The Simple Harmonic Oscillator
2.8 Fermions, Bosons, and Occupation Rules
2.9 A Bose Particle System: Thermal Radiation in Equilibrium
References
3 Quantum Description of Atoms and Molecules
3.1 Schrödinger Equation in Spherical Polar Coordinates
3.2 Indistinguishable Particles and Their Exchange Symmetry
3.3 Molecules
References
4 Metals, Semiconductors, and Junction Devices
4.1 Metals
4.2 Energy Bands in Periodic Structures
4.3 pn Junctions, Diode
I
–
V
Characteristic, Photodetector, and Injection Laser
4.4 Semiconductor Surface: Schottky Barrier
4.5 Ferromagnets
4.6 Piezoelectrics, Pyroelectrics, and Superconductors
References
5 Some Newer Building Blocks for Nanoelectronic Devices
5.1 The Benzene Ring, a Conceptual Basis
5.2 The Graphene sheet, a Second Conceptual Basis
5.3 Carbon Nanotubes and Related Materials
5.4 Gold, Si, and CdS Nanowires and a Related Device
5.5 “Endohedral” C
60
Buckyballs ~0.5 nm and Related Fullerene Molecules
5.6 Quantum Dots
5.7 Quantum Wells and the Two-Dimensional Electron Gas Metal (2DEG)
5.8 Photonic Crystals
5.9 Organic Molecules and Conductive Polymers
References
6 Fabrication and Characterization Methods
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Surface Structuring
6.3 Specialized Vapor Deposition Processes
6.4 Silicon Technology: The INTEL–IBM Approach to Nanotechnology
6.5 Advanced Patterning and Photolithography
6.6 Use of DNA Strands in Guiding Self-Assembly of Nanometer-Size Structures
6.7 Scanning Probe Sensing and Fabrication Methods
References
7 The Field Effect Transistor: Size Limits
7.1 Metal–Oxide–Silicon Field-Effect Transistor
7.2 Small Size Limits for the MOSFET
7.3 Present Status of MOSFET Fabrication and Performance
7.4 Alternative to Bulk Silicon: Buried Oxide BOX
7.5 Alternative to Bulk Silicon: Strain Engineering
7.6 The Benzene Molecule as a Field Effect Transistor
References
8 Devices Based upon Electron Tunneling: Resonant Tunnel Diodes
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Physical Basis of Tunneling Devices
8.3 Resonant Tunneling Diodes and Hot Electron Transistors
8.4 Superconducting (RSFQ) Logic/Memory Computer Elements
8.5 Epitaxial MgO-Barrier Tunnel Junctions: Magnetic Field Sensors
References
9 Single-Electron Transistors, Molecular and Hybrid Electronics
9.1 Introduction to Coulomb and Molecular Devices
9.2 Single-Electron (Coulomb) Transistor SET
9.3 Single Molecules as Active Elements in Electronic Circuits
9.4 Hybrid Nanoelectronics Combining Si CMOS and Molecular Electronics: CMOL
9.5 Carbon Nanotube Crossbar Arrays for Ultradense, Ultrafast, Nonvolatile Random Access Memory
9.6 Carbon Nanotube-Based Electromechanical Switch Arrays for Nonvolatile Random Access Memory
9.7 Proposed 16-bit Parallel Processing in a Molecular Assembly
References
10 Devices Based on Electron Spin and Ferromagnetism for Storage and Logic
10.1 Hard and Soft Ferromagnets
10.2 The Origins of Giant Magnetoresistance
10.3 Magnetic Random Access Memory
10.4 Hybrid Ferromagnet–Semiconductor Nonvolatile Hall Effect Gate Devices
10.5 Spin Injection: The Johnson–Silsbee Effect
10.6 Imaging a Single Electron Spin by a Magnetic Resonance AFM
10.7 Magnetic Logic Devices: A Majority Universal Logic Gate
10.8 Magnetic Domain Wall Racetrack Memory
References
11 Qubits Versus Binary Bits in a Quantum Computer
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Electron and Nuclear Spins and Their Interaction
11.3 A Spin-Based Quantum Computer Using STM
11.4 Double-Well Potential Charge Qubits
11.5 Ion Trap on a GaAs Chip, Pointing to a New Qubit
11.6 Adiabatic Quantum Computation
References
12 Applications of Nanoelectronic Technology to Energy Issues
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Solar Energy and Its Conversion
12.3 Hydrogen Production (Solar) for Energy Transport
12.4 Storage and Transport of Hydrogen as a Potential Fuel
12.5 Surface Adsorption as a Method of Storing Hydrogen in High Density
References
13 Future of Nanoelectronic Technology
13.1 Silicon Devices
13.2 Solar Energy Conversion with Printed Solar Cells
13.3 Emergence of Nanoimprinting Methods
13.4 Self-Assembly of Nanostructured Electrodes
13.5 Emerging Methods in Nanoelectronic Technology
References
Exercises
Abbreviations
Some Useful Constants
Index
Wiley End User License Agreement
List of Tables
3 Quantum Description of Atoms and Molecules
Table 3.1
One-electron wavefunctions in real form.
4 Metals, Semiconductors, and Junction Devices
Table 4.1
Fermi energy
E
F
, Fermi temperature
T
F
, and free electron density
n
=
N/V
for metals.
Table 4.2
Energy gaps and other electronic parameters of important semiconductors.
Table 4.3
Properties of some common ferromagnets.
10 Devices Based on Electron Spin and Ferromagnetism for Storage and Logic
Table 10.1
Summary of logic states in the majority gate [13] for all input combinations (truth table).