McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Special CPM Seminar

Ionic liquid gating of InAs nanowire-based field effect transistors

Francesco Rossella

NEST, Scuola Normale Superiore & Istituto Nanoscienze-CNR

The operation of an ionic liquid-gated field effect transistor based on a single InAs nanowire will be presented and discussed. The voltage-biased ionic liquid implements the electric-double-layer inducing the field effect in the semiconductor nanostructure, and this allows to achieve the full control over the nanowire transistor. The ionic liquid gate is up to 40 times more performing with respect to the back- gate. The temperature dependence of the resistance, measured for different doping levels, reveals a clear change in the behavior of the nanostructure from fully semiconducting to quasi-metallic. Perspectives of the use of liquid gating techniques to operate nanodevices based on III-V semiconductor nanostructures will be discussed. These include fundamental and applied studies spanning from carrier density induced phase-transitions to bioelectronics.

[SEM mongraph]
(a) SEM micrograph (tilted view) of InAs nanowires grown by chemical beam epitaxy. Inset: top vie evidencing the hexagonal cross-section. (b) SEM micrograph (top view) of a prototypical InAs nanowire FET: four electrodes define three NW sections. The NW is red-colored; the ionic liquid drop i schematically depicted in overlay. (c) Schematic of a liquid electrolyte gated InAs nanowire FET. (d) Electrical current flowing in the NW as a function of the applied liquid gate voltage.
Monday, June 18th 2018, 14:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)