Graphene Barristor, a Triode Device with a Gate-Controlled Schottky Barrier

Updating the Triode with Graphene In early electronics, the triode—a vacuum device that combined a diode and an electrical grid—was used to control and amplify signals, but was replaced in most applications by solid-state silicon electronics. One characteristic of silicon-metal interfaces is that the Schottky barrier created—which acts as a diode—does not change with the work function of the metal—the Fermi level is pinned by the presence of surface states. Yang et al. (p. 1140, published online 17 May) now show that for a graphene-silicon interface, Fermi-level pinning can be overcome and a triode-type device with a variable barrier, a “barristor,” can be made and used to create devices such as inverters. The absence of defects and surface oxides at a graphene/silicon interface enables voltage control of graphene devices. Despite several years of research into graphene electronics, sufficient on/off current ratio Ion/Ioff in graphene transistors with conventional device structures has been impossible to obtain. We report on a three-terminal active device, a graphene variable-barrier “barristor” (GB), in which the key is an atomically sharp interface between graphene and hydrogenated silicon. Large modulation on the device current (on/off ratio of 105) is achieved by adjusting the gate voltage to control the graphene-silicon Schottky barrier. The absence of Fermi-level pinning at the interface allows the barrier’s height to be tuned to 0.2 electron volt by adjusting graphene’s work function, which results in large shifts of diode threshold voltages. Fabricating GBs on respective 150-mm wafers and combining complementary p- and n-type GBs, we demonstrate inverter and half-adder logic circuits.

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