Flexible CMOS integrated circuits based on carbon nanotubes with sub-10 ns stage delays

Author:  ["Jianshi Tang","Qing Cao","George Tulevski","Keith A. Jenkins","Luca Nela","Damon B. Farmer","Shu-Jen Han"]

Publication:  Nature Electronics

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Electronics

Abstract

High-performance logic circuits that are constructed on flexible or unconventional substrates are required for emerging applications such as real-time analytics. Carbon nanotube thin-film transistors (TFTs) are attractive for these applications because of their high mobility and low cost. However, flexible nanotube TFTs usually suffer from much lower performance than those built on rigid substrates, and the resulting flexible integrated circuits typically exhibit low-speed operation with logic gate delays of over 1 μs, which severely limits their practical application. Here we show that high-performance carbon nanotube TFTs and complementary circuits can be fabricated on flexible polyimide substrates using a high-yield, scalable process. Our flexible TFTs exhibit state-of-the-art performance with very high current densities (>17 μA μm−1), large current on/off ratios (>106), small subthreshold slopes (<200 mV dec−1), high field-effect mobilities (~50 cm2 V−1 s−1) and excellent flexibility. We also develop a reliable n-type doping process, which allows us to fabricate complementary logic gates and integrated circuits on flexible substrates. With our approach, we build flexible ring oscillators that have a stage delay of only 5.7 ns. High-performance carbon nanotube thin-film transistors and complementary circuits can be fabricated on flexible substrates, including ring oscillators that have a stage delay of only 5.7 ns.

Cite this article

Tang, J., Cao, Q., Tulevski, G. et al. Flexible CMOS integrated circuits based on carbon nanotubes with sub-10 ns stage delays. Nat Electron 1, 191–196 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41928-018-0038-8

View full text

>> Full Text:   Flexible CMOS integrated circuits based on carbon nanotubes with sub-10 ns stage delays

Low-power carbon nanotube-based integrated circuits that can be transferred to biological surfaces

Self-induced topological protection in nonlinear circuit arrays