This is a schematic of the "puckered honeycomb" crystal structure of black phosphorus.
Credit: Vahid Tayari/McGill University
As scientists continue to hunt for a material
that will make it possible to pack more transistors on a chip, new
research from McGill University and Université de Montréal adds to
evidence that black phosphorus could emerge as a strong candidate.
In a study published today in Nature Communications, the
researchers report that when electrons move in a phosphorus transistor,
they do so only in two dimensions. The finding suggests that black
phosphorus could help engineers surmount one of the big challenges for
future electronics: designing energy-efficient transistors.
"Transistors work more efficiently when they are thin, with electrons
moving in only two dimensions," says Thomas Szkopek, an associate
professor in McGill's Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
and senior author of the new study. "Nothing gets thinner than a single
layer of atoms."
In 2004, physicists at the University of Manchester in the U.K. first
isolated and explored the remarkable properties of graphene -- a
one-atom-thick layer of carbon. Since then scientists have rushed to to
investigate a range of other two-dimensional materials. One of those is
black phosphorus, a form of phosphorus that is similar to graphite and
can be separated easily into single atomic layers, known as phosphorene.
Phosphorene has sparked growing interest because it overcomes many of
the challenges of using graphene in electronics. Unlike graphene, which
acts like a metal, black phosphorus is a natural semiconductor: it can
be readily switched on and off.
"To lower the operating voltage of transistors, and thereby reduce
the heat they generate, we have to get closer and closer to designing
the transistor at the atomic level," Szkopek says. "The toolbox of the
future for transistor designers will require a variety of atomic-layered
materials: an ideal semiconductor, an ideal metal, and an ideal
dielectric. All three components must be optimized for a well designed
transistor. Black phosphorus fills the semiconducting-material role."
The work resulted from a multidisciplinary collaboration among
Szkopek's nanoelectronics research group, the nanoscience lab of McGill
Physics Prof. Guillaume Gervais, and the nanostructures research group
of Prof. Richard Martel in Université de Montréal's Department of
Chemistry.
To examine how the electrons move in a phosphorus transistor, the
researchers observed them under the influence of a magnetic field in
experiments performed at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in
Tallahassee, FL, the largest and highest-powered magnet laboratory in
the world. This research "provides important insights into the
fundamental physics that dictate the behavior of black phosphorus," says
Tim Murphy, DC Field Facility Director at the Florida facility.
"What's surprising in these results is that the electrons are able to
be pulled into a sheet of charge which is two-dimensional, even though
they occupy a volume that is several atomic layers in thickness,"
Szkopek says. That finding is significant because it could potentially
facilitate manufacturing the material -- though at this point "no one
knows how to manufacture this material on a large scale."
"There is a great emerging interest around the world in black
phosphorus," Szkopek says. "We are still a long way from seeing atomic
layer transistors in a commercial product, but we have now moved one
step closer."
This work was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada, the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, the
Fonds de recherche du Québec -- Nature et technologies, Le regroupement
québécois sur les matériaux de pointe, and the Canada Research Chairs
program. A portion of the work was performed at the National High
Magnetic Field Laboratory which is supported by the National Science
Foundation, the State of Florida and the U.S. Department of Energy.
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