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Get Free AccessBecause semiconductor nanowires can transport electrons and holes, they could function as building blocks for nanoscale electronics assembled without the need for complex and costly fabrication facilities. Boron- and phosphorous-doped silicon nanowires were used as building blocks to assemble three types of semiconductor nanodevices. Passive diode structures consisting of crossed p- and n-type nanowires exhibit rectifying transport similar to planar p-n junctions. Active bipolar transistors, consisting of heavily and lightly n-doped nanowires crossing a common p-type wire base, exhibit common base and emitter current gains as large as 0.94 and 16, respectively. In addition, p- and n-type nanowires have been used to assemble complementary inverter-like structures. The facile assembly of key electronic device elements from well-defined nanoscale building blocks may represent a step toward a "bottom-up" paradigm for electronics manufacturing.
Yi Cui, Charles M. Lieber (2001). Functional Nanoscale Electronic Devices Assembled Using Silicon Nanowire Building Blocks. Science, 291(5505), pp. 851-853, DOI: 10.1126/science.291.5505.851.
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Type
Article
Year
2001
Authors
2
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Science
DOI
10.1126/science.291.5505.851
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