Imbedding platinum nanoparticles reduces power consumption by half. The new technology extends memory by one million times and is applicable in next-generation low-power devices.
From: University of Science & Technology (POSTECH)
September 22, 2022 -- Stepping
stones are placed to help travelers to cross streams. As long as there are
stepping stones that connect the both sides of the water, one can easily get across
with just a few steps. Using the same principal, a research team at POSTECH has
developed technology that cuts the power consumption in semiconductor devices
in half by placing stepping stones.
A research team led by Professor Junwoo Son and Dr. Minguk Cho
(Department of Materials Science and Engineering) at POSTECH has succeeded in
maximizing the switching efficiency of oxide semiconductor devices by inserting
platinum nanoparticles. The findings from the study were recently published in
the international journal Nature Communications.
The oxide material with the metal-insulator phase transition, in which
the phase of a material rapidly changes from an insulator to a metal when the
threshold voltage is reached, is spotlighted as a key material for fabricating
low-power semiconductor devices.
The metal-insulator phase transition occurs when insulator domains,
several nanometer (nm, billionth of a meter) units big, are transformed into
metal domains. The key was to reduce the magnitude of the voltage applied to
the device to increase the switching efficiency of a semiconductor device.
The research team succeeded in increasing the switching efficiency of
the device by using platinum nanoparticles. When voltage was applied to a
device, an electric current "skipped" through these particles and a
rapid phase transition occurred.
The memory effect of the device also increased by more than a million
times. In general, after the voltage is cut off, it immediately changes to the
insulator phase where no current flows; this duration was extremely short at 1
millionth of a second. However, it was confirmed that the memory effect of
remembering the previous firing of the devices can be increased to several
seconds, and the device could be operated again with relatively low voltage
owing to the residual metallic domains remaining near the platinum
nanoparticles.
This technology is anticipated to be essential for the development of
next-generation electronic devices, such as intelligent semiconductors or
neuromorphic semiconductor devices that can process vast amounts of data with
less power.
This study was conducted with the support from the Basic Science
Research Program, Mid-career Researcher Program, and the Next-generation
Intelligence Semiconductor Program of the National Research Foundation of
Korea.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/09/220922103205.htm
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