Produktbild: Beyond-CMOS Nanodevices 1

Beyond-CMOS Nanodevices 1

Fr. 268.00

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

14.07.2014

Herausgeber

Francis Balestra

Verlag

ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

528

Maße (L/B/H)

23.6/16.3/3.3 cm

Gewicht

916 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-84821-654-9

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

14.07.2014

Herausgeber

Francis Balestra

Verlag

ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

528

Maße (L/B/H)

23.6/16.3/3.3 cm

Gewicht

916 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-84821-654-9

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Beyond-CMOS Nanodevices 1
  • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii

    GENERAL INTRODUCTION xv
    Francis BALESTRA

    PART 1. SILION NANOWIRE BIOCHEMICAL SENSORS 1

    PART 1. INTRODUCTION 3
    Per-Erik HELLSTRÖM and Mikael ÖSTLING

    CHAPTER 1. FABRICATION OF NANOWIRES   5
    Jens BOLTEN, Per-Erik HELLSTRÖM, Mikael ÖSTLING, Céline TERNON and Pauline SERRE

    1.1. Introduction 5

    1.2. Silicon nanowire fabrication with electron beam lithography 6

    1.2.1. Key requirements 6

    1.2.2. Why electron beam lithography?   7

    1.2.3. Lithographic requirements 8

    1.2.4. Tools, resist materials and development processes  9

    1.2.5. Exposure strategies and proximity effect correction 10

    1.2.6. Technology limitations and how to circumvent them  11

    1.3. Silicon nanowire fabrication with sidewall transfer lithography   14

    1.4. Si nanonet fabrication 17

    1.4.1. Si NWs fabrication  18

    1.4.2. Si nanonet assembling 19

    1.4.3. Si nanonet morphology and properties 19

    1.5. Acknowledgments 21

    1.6. Bibliography 21

    CHAPTER 2. FUNCTIONALIZATION OF SI-BASED NW FETs FOR DNA DETECTION  25
    Valérie STAMBOULI, Céline TERNON, Pauline SERRE and Louis FRADETAL

    2.1. Introduction 25

    2.2. Functionalization process 27

    2.3. Functionalization of Si nanonets for DNA biosensing   28

    2.3.1. Detection of DNA hybridization on the Si nanonet by fluorescence microscopy  31

    2.3.2. Preliminary electrical characterizations of NW networks 33

    2.4. Functionalization of SiC nanowire-based sensor for electrical DNA biosensing35

    2.4.1. SiC nanowire-based sensor functionalization process  35

    2.4.2. DNA electrical detection from SiC nanowire-based sensor 38

    2.5. Acknowledgments 39

    2.6. Bibliography 40

    CHAPTER 3. SENSITIVITY OF SILICON NANOWIRE BIOCHEMICAL SENSORS  43
    Pierpaolo PALESTRI, Mireille MOUIS, Aryan AFZALIAN, Luca SELMI, Federico PITTINO, Denis FLANDRE and Gérard GHIBAUDO

    3.1. Introduction 43

    3.1.1. Definitions 43

    3.1.2. Main parameters affecting the sensitivity 47

    3.2. Sensitivity and noise  47

    3.3. Modeling the sensitivity of Si NW biosensors 50

    3.3.1. Modeling the electrolyte 52

    3.4. Sensitivity of random arrays of 1D nanostructures    54

    3.4.1. Electrical characterization 55

    3.4.2. Low-frequency noise characterization 56

    3.4.3. Simulation of electron conduction in random networks of 1D nanostructures 56

    3.4.4. Discussion  59

    3.5. Conclusions 59

    3.6. Acknowledgments 60

    3.7. Bibliography 60

    CHAPTER 4. INTEGRATION OF SILICON NANOWIRES WITH CMOS 65
    Per-Erik HELLSTRÖM, Ganesh JAYAKUMAR and Mikael ÖSTLING

    4.1. Introduction 65

    4.2. Overview of CMOS process technology 66

    4.3. Integration of silicon nanowire after BEOL 66

    4.4. Integration of silicon nanowires in FEOL  67

    4.5. Sensor architecture design 69

    4.6. Conclusions 71

    4.7. Bibliography 72

    CHAPTER 5. PORTABLE, INTEGRATED LOCK-IN-AMPLIFIER-BASED SYSTEM FOR REAL-TIME IMPEDIMETRIC MEASUREMENTS ON NANOWIRES BIOSENSORS 73
    Michele ROSSI and Marco TARTAGNI

    5.1. Introduction 73

    5.2. Portable stand-alone system 74

    5.3. Integrated impedimetric interface 76

    5.4. Impedimetric measurements on nanowire sensors  78

    5.5. Bibliography 81

    PART 2. NEW MATERIALS, DEVICES AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR ENERGY HARVESTING 83

    PART 2. INTRODUCTION 85
    Enrico SANGIORGI

    CHAPTER 6. VIBRATIONAL ENERGY HARVESTING 89
    Luca LARCHER, Saibal ROY, Dhiman MALLICK, Pranay PODDER, Massimo DE VITTORIO, Teresa TODARO, Francesco GUIDO, Alessandro BERTACCHINI, Ronan HINCHET, Julien KERAUDY and Gustavo ARDILA

    6.1. Introduction 89

    6.2. Piezoelectric energy transducer 91

    6.2.1. Introduction 91

    6.2.2. State-of-the-art devices and materials  92

    6.2.3. MEMS piezoelectric vibration energy harvesting transducers   95

    6.2.4. RMEMS prototypes characterization and discussions of experimental results 102

    6.2.5. Near field characterization techniques 104

    6.2.6. Dedicated electro-mechanical models for piezoelectric transducer design 106

    6.3. Electromagnetic energy transducers   109

    6.3.1. Introduction 109

    6.3.2. State-of-the-art devices and materials  109

    6.3.3. Vibration energy harvester exploiting both the piezoelectric and electromagnetic effect 122

    6.3.4. Device design 125

    6.4. Bibliography 128

    CHAPTER 7. THERMAL ENERGY HARVESTING   135
    Mireille MOUIS, Emigdio CHÁVEZ-ÁNGEL, Clivia SOTOMAYOR-TORRES, Francesc ALZINA, Marius V. COSTACHE, Androula G. NASSIOPOULOU, Katerina VALALAKI, Emmanouel HOURDAKIS, Sergio O. VALENZUELA, Bernard VIALA, Dmitry ZAKHAROV, Andrey SHCHEPETOV and Jouni AHOPELTO

    7.1. Introduction 135

    7.1.1. Basics of thermoelectric conversion 136

    7.1.2. Strategies to increase ZT 137

    7.1.3. Heavy-metal-free TE generation  140

    7.1.4. Alternatives to TE harvesting for self-powered solid-state microsystems 141

    7.2. Thermal transport at nanoscale 142

    7.2.1. Brief review of nanoscale thermal conductivity  143

    7.2.2. The effect of phonon confinement  146

    7.2.3. Fabrication of ultrathin free-standing silicon membranes 153

    7.2.4. Advanced methods of characterizing phonon dispersion, lifetimes and thermal conductivity    156

    7.3. Porous silicon for thermal insulation on silicon wafers  172

    7.3.1. Introduction 172

    7.3.2. Thermal conductivity of nanostructured porous Si  172

    7.3.3. Thermal isolation using thick porous Si layers    176

    7.3.4. Thermoelectric generator using porous Si thermal isolation 177

    7.4. Spin dependent thermoelectric effects   185

    7.4.1. Physical principle and interest for thermal energy harvesting    186

    7.4.2. Demonstration of the magnon drag effect 188

    7.5. Composites of thermal shape memory alloy and piezoelectric materials   192

    7.5.1. Introduction 192

    7.5.2. Physical principle and interest for thermal energy harvesting    193

    7.5.3. Novelty and realizations 194

    7.5.4. Theoretical considerations 195

    7.5.5. Examples of use  196

    7.5.6. Summary of composite harvesting by the combination of SMA and piezoelectric materials 204

    7.6. Conclusions 204

    7.7. Bibliography 205

    CHAPTER 8. NANOWIRE BASED SOLAR CELLS   221
    Mauro ZANUCCOLI, Anne KAMINSKI-CACHOPO, Jérôme MICHALLON, Vincent CONSONNI, Igar SEMENIKHIN, Mehdi DAANOUNE, Frédérique DUCROQUET, David KOHEN, Christine MORIN and Claudio FIEGNA

    8.1 Introduction   221

    8.2. Design of NW-based solar cells    223

    8.2.1. Geometrical optimization of NW-based solar cells by numerical simulations  223

    8.2.2. TCAD simulation of NW-based solar cells 230

    8.3. Fabrication and opto-electrical characterization of NW-based solar cells 235

    8.3.1. Elaboration of NW-based solar cells  235

    8.3.2. Opto-electrical characterization of NW-based solar cells 236

    8.4 Conclusion   243

    8.5 Acknowledgments 243

    8.6 Bibliography 243

    CHAPTER 9. SMART ENERGY MANAGEMENT AND CONVERSION 249
    Wensi WANG, James F. ROHAN, Ningning WANG, Mike HAYES, Aldo ROMANI, Enrico MACRELLI, Michele DINI, Matteo FILIPPI, Marco TARTAGNI and Denis FLANDRE

    9.1. Introduction 249

    9.2. Power management solutions for energy harvesting devices 251

    9.2.1. Ultra-low voltage thermoelectric energy harvesting 251

    9.2.2. Sub-1mW photovoltaic energy harvesting 256

    9.2.3. Piezoelectric and micro-electromagnetic energy harvesting 260

    9.2.4. DC/DC power management for future micro-generator 262

    9.3. Sub-mW energy storage solutions    266

    9.4. Conclusions 270

    9.5. Bibliography 271

    PART 3. ON-CHIP ELECTRONIC COOLING    277

    CHAPTER 10. TUNNEL JUNCTION ELECTRONIC COOLERS    279
    Martin PREST, James RICHARDSON-BULLOCK, Terry WHALL, Evan PARKER and David LEADLEY

    10.1. Introduction and motivation 279

    10.1.1. Existing cryogenic technology   280

    10.2. Tunneling junctions as coolers    281

    10.2.1. The NIS junction  281

    10.2.2. Cooling power 284

    10.2.3. Thermometry 286

    10.2.4. The superconductor-insulator-normal metal-insulator-superconductor (SINIS) structure  287

    10.2.5. Double junction superconductor-silicon-superconductor (SSmS) cooler 288

    10.3. Limitations to cooling  289

    10.3.1. States within the superconductor gap 290

    10.3.2. Joule heating 291

    10.3.3. Series resistance 291

    10.3.4. Quasi-particle-related heating   293

    10.3.5. Andreev reflection 295

    10.4. Heavy fermion-based coolers 297

    10.5. Summary   299

    10.6. Bibliography  300

    CHAPTER 11. SILICON-BASED COOLING ELEMENTS 303
    David LEADLEY, Martin PREST, Jouni AHOPELTO, Tom BRIEN, David GUNNARSSON, Phil MAUSKOPF, Juha MUHONEN, Maksym MYRONOV, Hung NGUYEN, Evan PARKER, Mika PRUNNILA, James RICHARDSON-BULLOCK, Vishal SHAH, Terry WHALL and Qing-Tai ZHAO

    11.1. Introduction to semiconductor-superconductor tunnel junction coolers   303

    11.2. Silicon-based Schottky barrier junctions  304

    11.3. Carrier-phonon coupling in strained silicon 308

    11.3.1. Measurement of electron-phonon coupling constant  312

    11.4. Strained silicon Schottky barrier mK coolers 315

    11.5. Silicon mK coolers with an oxide barrier [GUN 13]   318

    11.5.1. Reduction of sub-gap leakage   318

    11.5.2. Effects of strain 319

    11.6. The silicon cold electron bolometer   321

    11.7. Integration of detector and electronics  324

    11.8. Summary and future prospects    325

    11.9. Acknowledgments 327

    11.10 Bibliography  327

    CHAPTER 12. THERMAL ISOLATION THROUGH NANOSTRUCTURING. 331
    David LEADLEY, Vishal SHAH, Jouni AHOPELTO, Francesc ALZINA, Emigdio CHÁVEZ-ÁNGEL, Juha MUHONEN, Maksym MYRONOV, Androula G. NASSIOPOULOU, Hung NGUYEN, Evan PARKER, Jukka PEKOLA, Martin PREST, Mika PRUNNILA, Juan Sebastian REPARAZ, Andrey SHCHEPETOV, Clivia SOTOMAYOR-TORRES, Katerina VALALAKI and Terry WHALL

    12.1. Introduction 331

    12.2. Lattice cooling by physical nanostructuring 331

    12.3. Porous Si membranes as cryogenic thermal isolation platforms 337

    12.3.1. Porous Si micro-coldplates    337

    12.3.2. Porous Si thermal conductivity  339

    12.4. Crystalline membrane platforms    343

    12.4.1. Strained germanium membranes   343

    12.4.2. Thermal conductance measurements in Si and Ge membranes    350

    12.4.3. Epitaxy-compatible thermal isolation platform  355

    12.5. Summary of thermal conductance measurements    355

    12.6. Acknowledgments. 358

    12.7. Bibliography  358

    PART 4. NEW MATERIALS, DEVICES AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR RF APPLICATIONS  365

    PART 4. INTRODUCTION 367
    Androula G. NASSIOPOULOU

    CHAPTER 13. SUBSTRATE TECHNOLOGIES FOR SILICON-INTEGRATED RF AND MM-WAVE PASSIVE DEVICES  373
    Androula G. NASSIOPOULOU, Panagiotis SARAFIS, Jean-Pierre RASKIN, Hanza ISSA, Philippe FERRARI

    13.1. Introduction 373

    13.2. High-resistivity Si substrate for RF   374

    13.2.1. Losses along coplanar waveguide transmission lines 375

    13.2.2. Crosstalk  380

    13.2.3. Nonlinearities along CPW lines   384

    13.3. Porous Si substrate technology    385

    13.3.1. General properties of porous Si   386

    13.3.2. Dielectric properties of porous Si  389

    13.3.3. Broadband electrical characterization of CPWT Lines on porous Si 393

    13.3.4. Inductors on porous Si397

    13.3.5. Antennas on porous Si399

    13.4. Comparison between HR Si and local porous Si substrate technologies 400

    13.4.1. Comparison of similar CPW TLines on different substrates    400

    13.4.2. Comparison of inductors on different RF substrates  404

    13.5. Design of slow-wave CPWs and filters on porous silicon 404

    13.5.1. Slow-wave CPW TLines on porous Si 405

    13.5.2. Simulation results for S-CPW TLines 406

    13.5.3. Stepped impedance low-pass filter on porous silicon 408

    13.5.4. Simulation results for filters    409

    13.6. Conclusion 411

    13.7. Acknowledgments 411

    13.8. Bibliography  411

    CHAPTER 14. METAL NANOLINES AND ANTENNAS FOR RF AND MM-WAVE APPLICATIONS 419
    Philippe BENECH, Chuan-Lun HSU, Gustavo ARDILA, Panagiotis SARAFIS and Androula G. NASSIOPOULOU

    14.1. Introduction 419

    14.2. Metal nanowires (nanolines) 420

    14.2.1. General properties  420

    14.2.2. Transmission nanolines in microstrip configuration: characterization and modeling 426

    14.2.3. Transmission nanolines in CPW configuration: fabrication, characterization and modeling 430

    14.2.4. Characterization up to 200 GHz   440

    14.3. Antennas   441

    14.3.1. On-chip antennas: general    441

    14.3.2. On-chip antenna characterization method 443

    14.3.3. Measurement results 444

    14.3.4. Discussion on antenna results   451

    14.4. Conclusion 451

    14.5. Acknowledgments 452

    14.6. Bibliography  452

    CHAPTER 15. NANOSTRUCTURED MAGNETIC MATERIALS FOR HIGH-FREQUENCY APPLICATIONS 457
    Saibal ROY, Jeffrey GODSELL and Tuhin MAITY

    15.1. Introduction 457

    15.2. Power conversion and integration   457

    15.3. Materials and integration 459

    15.4. Controlling the magnetic properties   463

    15.5. Magnetic properties of nanocomposite materials    467

    15.6. Magnetic properties of nanomodulated continuous films  470

    15.7. Conclusion 478

    15.8. Bibliography  479

    LIST OF AUTHORS  485

    INDEX 493