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SUMMARY:MSE Seminar: "Turbo-charging Silicon: Do we have the materials and devices?" (Deep Jariwala) University of Pennsylvania
DESCRIPTION:Silicon has been the dominant material for electronic computing for decades and very likely will stay dominant for the foreseeable future. However\, it is well-known that Moore’s law that propelled Silicon into this dominant position is long dead.  Therefore\, a fervent search for (i) new semiconductors that could directly replace silicon or (ii) new architectures with novel materials/devices added onto silicon or (iii) new physics/state-variables or a combination of above has been the subject of much of the electronic materials and devices research of the past 2 decades. The above problem is further complicated by the changing paradigm of computing from arithmetic centric to data centric in the age of billions of internet-connected devices and artificial intelligence. Therefore\, there is a pressing need for complementing and supplementing Silicon to operate with greater efficiency\, speed and handle greater amounts of data. This is further necessary since a completely novel and paradigm changing computing platform (e.g. all optical computing or quantum computing) remains out of reach for now.\nThe above is however not possible without fundamental innovation in new electronic materials and devices. Therefore\, in this talk\, I will try to make the case of how novel layered two-dimensional (2D) chalcogenide materials and three-dimensional (3D) nitride materials might present interesting avenues to overcome some of the limitations being faced by Silicon hardware. I will start by presenting our ongoing and recent work on integration of 2D chalcogenide semiconductors with silicon 1\, 2 to realize low-power tunnelling field effect transistors. In particular I will focus on In-Se based 2D semiconductors 1 for this application and extend discussion on them to phase-pure\, epitaxial thin-film growth over wafer scales\, 3 at temperatures low-enough to be compatible with back end of line (BEOL) processing in Silicon fabs.\nI will then switch gears to discuss memory devices from 2D materials when integrated with emerging wurtzite structure ferroelectric nitride materials 4 namely aluminium scandium nitride (AlScN). First\, I will present on Ferroelectric Field Effect Transistors (FE-FETs) made from 2D materials when integrated with AlScN and make the case for 2D semiconductors in this application. 5\, 6 Next I will introduce our work on Ferroelectric Diode (FeD) devices also based on thin AlScN. 7 In addition\, I will also present how FeDs provide a unique advantage in compute-in-memory (CIM) architectures for efficient storage\, search as well as hardware implementation of neural networks. Finally\, I will present ongoing work and opportunities to extend the application of AlScN memory devices into extreme environments.\nI will end the talk with a broad perspective on the role of novel materials that could turbo- charge silicon and other pervasive semiconductor technologies for electronic computing. \nReferences:\n1. Miao\, J.; et al. Jariwala\, D.\, Nature Electronics 2022\, 5 (11)\, 744-751.\n2. Miao\, J.; et al. Jariwala\, D.\, Nano Letters 2020\, 20 (4)\, 2907-2915.\n3. Song\, S.; et al. Stach\, E. A.; Olsson\, R. H.; Jariwala\, D.\, Matter 2023\n(online).\n4. Kim\, K.-H.; Karpov\, I.; Olsson\, R. H.; Jariwala\, D.\, Nature Nanotechnology\n2023\, 18 (5)\, 422-441.\n5. Liu\, X.; et al. Stach\, E. A.; Olsson\, R. H.; Jariwala\, D.\, Nano Letters 2021\, 21\n(9)\, 3753-3761.\n6. Kim\, K.-H.; Stach\, E. A.; Olsson\, R. H.; Jariwala\, D.\, Nature Nanotechnology\n2023.\n7. Liu\, X.; et al. Stach\, E. A.; Olsson III\, R.; Jariwala\, D.\, Applied Physics Letters\n2021\, 118 (20)\, 202901. \n8. Liu\, X.; et al. Stach\, E. A.; Olsson\, R. H.; Jariwala\, D.\, Nano Letters 2022\, 22\n(18)\, 7690–7698.
URL:https://seasevents.nmsdev7.com/event/mse-seminar-turbo-charging-silicon-do-we-have-the-materials-and-devices-deep-jariwala-university-of-pennsylvania/
LOCATION:Wu and Chen Auditorium (Room 101)\, Levine Hall\, 3330 Walnut Street\, Philadelphia\, PA\, 19104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Materials Science and Engineering":MAILTO:johnruss@seas.upenn.edu
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