Photon-triggered nanowire transistors
- Authors
- Kim, Jungkil; Lee, Hoo-Cheol; Kim, Kyoung-Ho; Hwang, Min-Soo; Park, Jin-Sung; Lee, Jung Min; So, Jae-Pil; Choi, Jae-Hyuck; Kwon, Soon-Hong; Barrelet, Carl J.; Park, Hong-Gyu
- Issue Date
- 10월-2017
- Publisher
- NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
- Citation
- NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY, v.12, no.10, pp.963 - 968
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
- Volume
- 12
- Number
- 10
- Start Page
- 963
- End Page
- 968
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/82131
- DOI
- 10.1038/NNANO.2017.153
- ISSN
- 1748-3387
- Abstract
- Photon-triggered electronic circuits have been a long-standing goal of photonics. Recent demonstrations include either alloptical transistors in which photons control other photons(1,2) or phototransistors with the gate response tuned or enhanced by photons(3-5). However, only a few studies report on devices in which electronic currents are optically switched and amplified without an electrical gate. Here we show photon-triggered nanowire (NW) transistors, photon-triggered NW logic gates and a single NW photodetection system. NWs are synthesized with long crystalline silicon (CSi) segments connected by short porous silicon (PSi) segments. In a fabricated device, the electrical contacts on both ends of the NW are connected to a single PSi segment in the middle. Exposing the PSi segment to light triggers a current in the NW with a high on/off ratio of >8 x 10(6). A device that contains two PSi segments along the NW can be triggered using two independent optical input signals. Using localized pump lasers, we demonstrate photon-triggered logic gates including AND, OR and NAND gates. A photon-triggered NW transistor of diameter 25 nm with a single 100 nm PSi segment requires less than 300 pW of power. Furthermore, we take advantage of the high photosensitivity and fabricate a submicrometre-resolution photodetection system. Photon-triggered transistors offer a new venue towards multifunctional device applications such as programmable logic elements and ultrasensitive photodetectors.
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Collections - College of Science > Department of Physics > 1. Journal Articles
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