Carbon nanotubes self-assemble into
tiny transistors
Carbon nanotubes can be used to
make very small electronic devices, but they are difficult to handle.
University of Groningen scientists, together with colleagues from the
University of Wuppertal and IBM Zurich, have developed a method to select
semiconducting nanotubes from a solution and make them self-assemble on a
circuit of gold electrodes. The results were published in the journal Advanced
Materials on 5 April. The results look deceptively simple: a self-assembled
transistor with nearly 100 percent purity and very high electron mobility. But
it took ten years to get there. University of Groningen Professor of
Photophysics and Optoelectronics Maria Antonietta Loi designed polymers which
wrap themselves around specific carbon nanotubes in a solution of mixed tubes.
Thiol side chains on the polymer bind the tubes to the gold electrodes,
creating the resultant transistor.
Patent
'In our previous work, we learned
a lot about how polymers attach to specific carbon nanotubes', Loi explains.
These nanotubes can be depicted as a rolled sheet of graphene, the
two-dimensional form of carbon. 'Depending on the way the sheets are rolled up,
they have properties ranging from semiconductor to semi-metallic to metallic.'
Only the semiconductor tubes can be used to fabricate transistors, but the
production process always results in a mixture. 'We had the idea of using
polymers with thiol side chains some time ago', says Loi. The idea was that as
sulphur binds to metals, it will direct polymer-wrapped nanotubes towards gold
electrodes. While Loi was working on the problem, IBM even patented the
concept. 'But there was a big problem in the IBM work: the polymers with thiols
also attached to metallic nanotubes and included them in the transistors, which
ruined them.'
Solution
Loi's solution was to reduce the
thiol content of the polymers, with the assistance of polymer chemists from the
University of Wuppertal. 'What we have now shown is that this concept of
bottom-up assembly works: by using polymers with a low concentration of thiols,
we can selectively bring semiconducting nanotubes from a solution onto a
circuit.' The sulphur-gold bond is strong, so the nanotubes are firmly fixed:
enough even to stay there after sonication of the transistor in organic
solvents. The production process is simple: metallic patterns are deposited on
a carrier , which is then dipped into a solution of carbon nanotubes. The
electrodes are spaced to achieve proper alignment: 'The tubes are some 500
nanometres long, and we placed the electrodes for the transistors at intervals
of 300 nanometres. The next transistor is over 500 nanometres away.' The
spacing limits the density of the transistors, but Loi is confident that this
could be increased with clever engineering. Over the last years, we have
created a library of polymers that select semiconducting nanotubes and
developed a better understanding of how the structure and composition of the
polymers influences which carbon nanotubes they select', says Loi. The result
is a cheap and scalable production method for nanotube electronics. So what is
the future for this technology? Loi: 'It is difficult to predict whether the
industry will develop this idea, but we are working on improvements, and this
will eventually bring the idea closer to the market.'
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