
|
Logic Circuits with Carbon Nanotube Transistors
Adrian Bachtold, Peter Hadley, Takeshi Nakanishi, Cees Dekker
|
Supplementary Material
In our numerical calculation, we follow (
25) and the work by A. A. Odintsov and Y. Tokura [
J. Low Temp. Phys. 118, 509 (2000)] to consider the junction between a semiconducting SWNT and a metal electrode. In these calculations, the current variation originates from the modulation of the barrier profile formed at the nanotube-electrode junction. The barrier profile is calculated self-consistently using the density of state of semiconducting SWNTs, the Poisson equation, and the conservation equation of the total electron energy. The Poisson equation relates the electrostatic potential

(
z) to the charge density

(
z) and the gate potential
Vg with
q =
Uq
q +
MqVqg, where
Uq and
Mq are defined below. The conservation equation of the total electron energy relates the charge neutrality level
E0(
z) to

(
z) with
E0(
z) +
e
(
z) =
W, where

W is the work function difference between the nanotube and the electrode.
We have adapted the calculations for our device layout as follows. (1) The gate is described as a semi-infinite plane under the SWNT. This leads to Uq = 2/k[I0(qR)K0(qR) - K0(2qRS)] and Mq = exp(-|q|RS), where k = 5 is the dielectric constant above the gate plane, I0 and K0 the modified Bessel functions, R the nanotube radius, and RS the distance between the nanotube axe and the gate plane. (2) To describe the strong electrostatic doping in an accurate way, we have included higher/lower branch in conduction/valence bands to calculate the density of states. The overlap energy
0 is taken equal to 2.6eV and the semiconducting gap equal to 0.7eV (35). (3) the surface charge is included in our model with the definition of equation 5 of (34) and q = 2nm-1. (4) We also consider the doping defined as equation 1 of (25).
After the calculation of the potential near the junction, the transmission probability T is determined using the WKB approximation. Finally, we get the current at room temperature using the Landauer formula.