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Publication
Featured researches published by Alberto Valdes Garcia.
Nano Letters | 2011
Shu-Jen Han; Keith A. Jenkins; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Aaron D. Franklin; Ageeth A. Bol; Wilfried Haensch
While graphene transistors have proven capable of delivering gigahertz-range cutoff frequencies, applying the devices to RF circuits has been largely hindered by the lack of current saturation in the zero band gap graphene. Herein, the first high-frequency voltage amplifier is demonstrated using large-area chemical vapor deposition grown graphene. The graphene field-effect transistor (GFET) has a 6-finger gate design with gate length of 500 nm. The graphene common-source amplifier exhibits ∼5 dB low frequency gain with the 3 dB bandwidth greater than 6 GHz. This first AC voltage gain demonstration of a GFET is attributed to the clear current saturation in the device, which is enabled by an ultrathin gate dielectric (4 nm HfO(2)) of the embedded gate structures. The device also shows extrinsic transconductance of 1.2 mS/μm at 1 V drain bias, the highest for graphene FETs using large-scale graphene reported to date.
Nature Communications | 2014
Shu-Jen Han; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Satoshi Oida; Keith A. Jenkins; Wilfried Haensch
Graphene has attracted much interest as a future channel material in radio frequency electronics because of its superior electrical properties. Fabrication of a graphene integrated circuit without significantly degrading transistor performance has proven to be challenging, posing one of the major bottlenecks to compete with existing technologies. Here we present a fabrication method fully preserving graphene transistor quality, demonstrated with the implementation of a high-performance three-stage graphene integrated circuit. The circuit operates as a radio frequency receiver performing signal amplification, filtering and downconversion mixing. All circuit components are integrated into 0.6 mm(2) area and fabricated on 200 mm silicon wafers, showing the unprecedented graphene circuit complexity and silicon complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor process compatibility. The demonstrated circuit performance allow us to use graphene integrated circuit to perform practical wireless communication functions, receiving and restoring digital text transmitted on a 4.3-GHz carrier signal.
international electron devices meeting | 2013
Shu-Jen Han; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Satoshi Oida; Keith A. Jenkins; Wilfried Haensch
With the rapid advances in graphene field-effect transistor (GFET) performances, graphene has attracted much interest as a future channel material in RF electronics. However, the pace of the development of graphene circuits seems significantly slower. Several graphene circuits demonstrated today showing promising GHz functions still relied on ideal discrete passive components connected at the equipment level, and these circuits are limited to single transistor designs [1-3]. To compete with existing technologies requires that all active and passive components be monolithically integrated for not only the small circuit footprint and low cost but also high circuit complexity and advanced system functionality.
Archive | 2006
Brian A. Floyd; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Ullrich R. Pfeiffer; Scott K. Reynolds
Archive | 2006
Troy J. Beukema; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Scott K. Reynolds
Archive | 2011
Shu-Jen Han; Alberto Valdes Garcia
Archive | 2013
Xiaoxiong Gu; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Duixian Liu; Scott K. Reynolds
Archive | 2011
Phaedon Avouris; Chun-Yung Sung; Alberto Valdes Garcia; Fengnian Xia
Archive | 2011
Alberto Valdes Garcia; Chinmaya Mishra; Scott K. Reynolds
Archive | 2010
Dong Gun Kam; Duixian Liu; Arun Natarajan; Scott K. Reynolds; Alberto Valdes Garcia