Giant Electron-Hole Transport Asymmetry in Ultra-Short Quantum Transistors
ORAL
Abstract
Making use of bipolar transport in single-wall carbon nanotube quantum transistors would permit a single device to operate as both a quantum dot and a ballistic conductor or as two quantum dots with different charging energies. Here we report ultra-clean 10 to 100 nm scale suspended nanotube transistors with a large electron-hole transport asymmetry. The devices consist of naked nanotube channels contacted with sections of tube under annealed gold. The annealed gold acts as an n-doping top gate, allowing coherent quantum transport, and can create nanometre-sharp barriers. These tunnel barriers define a single quantum dot whose charging energies to add an electron or a hole are vastly different (e−h charging energy asymmetry). We parameterize the e−h transport asymmetry by the ratio of the hole and electron charging energies ηe−h. This asymmetry is maximized for short channels and small band gap tubes. In a small band gap device, we demonstrate the fabrication of a dual functionality quantum device acting as a quantum dot for holes and a much longer quantum bus for electrons. In a 14 nm-long channel, ηe−h reaches up to 2.6 for a device with a band gap of 270 meV. The charging energies in this device exceed 100 meV.
A. C. McRae et al., Nat.Comm. 8, 15491 (2017).
A. C. McRae et al., Nat.Comm. 8, 15491 (2017).
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Presenters
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Andrew Mcrae
Department of Physics, Concordia University
Authors
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Andrew Mcrae
Department of Physics, Concordia University
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Vahid Tayari
Department of Physics, Concordia University
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James Porter
Department of Physics, Concordia University
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Alexandre Champagne
Department of Physics, Concordia University