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Dive into the research topics where Anil Dey is active.

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Featured researches published by Anil Dey.


Nano Letters | 2011

Effects of crystal phase mixing on the electrical properties of InAs nanowires

Claes Thelander; Philippe Caroff; Sr Sebastien Plissard; Anil Dey; Kimberley A. Dick

We report a systematic study of the relationship between crystal quality and electrical properties of InAs nanowires grown by MOVPE and MBE, with crystal structure varying from wurtzite to zinc blende. We find that mixtures of these phases can exhibit up to 2 orders of magnitude higher resistivity than single-phase nanowires, with a temperature-activated transport mechanism. However, it is also found that defects in the form of stacking faults and twin planes do not significantly affect the resistivity. These findings are important for nanowire-based devices, where uncontrolled formation of particular polytype mixtures may lead to unacceptable device variability.


Nano Letters | 2010

Growth Mechanism of Self-Catalyzed Group III−V Nanowires

Bernhard Mandl; J. Stangl; Emelie Hilner; Alexei Zakharov; Karla Hillerich; Anil Dey; Lars Samuelson; G. Bauer; Knut Deppert; Anders Mikkelsen

Group III−V nanowires offer the exciting possibility of epitaxial growth on a wide variety of substrates, most importantly silicon. To ensure compatibility with Si technology, catalyst-free growth schemes are of particular relevance, to avoid impurities from the catalysts. While this type of growth is well-documented and some aspects are described, no detailed understanding of the nucleation and the growth mechanism has been developed. By combining a series of growth experiments using metal−organic vapor phase epitaxy, as well as detailed in situ surface imaging and spectroscopy, we gain deeper insight into nucleation and growth of self-seeded III−V nanowires. By this mechanism most work available in literature concerning this field can be described.


Nano Letters | 2010

Vertical InAs nanowire wrap gate transistors with f(t) > 7 GHz and f(max) > 20 GHz.

Mikael Egard; Sofia Johansson; AnneCharlotte Johansson; Karl-Magnus Persson; Anil Dey; B. M. Borg; Claes Thelander; Lars-Erik Wernersson; Erik Lind

In this letter we report on high-frequency measurements on vertically standing III-V nanowire wrap-gate MOSFETs (metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors). The nanowire transistors are fabricated from InAs nanowires that are epitaxially grown on a semi-insulating InP substrate. All three terminals of the MOSFETs are defined by wrap around contacts. This makes it possible to perform high-frequency measurements on the vertical InAs MOSFETs. We present S-parameter measurements performed on a matrix consisting of 70 InAs nanowire MOSFETs, which have a gate length of about 100 nm. The highest unity current gain cutoff frequency, f(t), extracted from these measurements is 7.4 GHz and the maximum frequency of oscillation, f(max), is higher than 20 GHz. This demonstrates that this is a viable technique for fabricating high-frequency integrated circuits consisting of vertical nanowires.


IEEE Electron Device Letters | 2013

High-Current GaSb/InAs(Sb) Nanowire Tunnel Field-Effect Transistors

Anil Dey; B. M. Borg; Bahram Ganjipour; Martin Ek; Kimberly A. Dick; Erik Lind; Claes Thelander; Lars-Erik Wernersson

We present electrical characterization of GaSb/InAs(Sb) nanowire tunnel field-effect transistors. The broken band alignment of the GaSb/InAs(Sb) heterostructure is exploited to allow for interband tunneling without a barrier, leading to high on-current levels. We report a maximum drive current of 310 μA/μm at VDS = 0.5 V. Devices with scaled gate oxides display transconductances up to gm = 250 mS/mm at VDS = 300 mV, which are normalized to the nanowire circumference at the axial heterojunction.


Nano Letters | 2011

High Current Density Esaki Tunnel Diodes Based on GaSb-InAsSb Heterostructure Nanowires

Bahram Ganjipour; Anil Dey; Mattias Borg; Martin Ek; Mats-Erik Pistol; Kimberly Dick Thelander; Lars-Erik Wernersson; Claes Thelander

We present electrical characterization of broken gap GaSb-InAsSb nanowire heterojunctions. Esaki diode characteristics with maximum reverse current of 1750 kA/cm(2) at 0.50 V, maximum peak current of 67 kA/cm(2) at 0.11 V, and peak-to-valley ratio (PVR) of 2.1 are obtained at room temperature. The reverse current density is comparable to that of state-of-the-art tunnel diodes based on heavily doped p-n junctions. However, the GaSb-InAsSb diodes investigated in this work do not rely on heavy doping, which permits studies of transport mechanisms in simple transistor structures processed with high-κ gate dielectrics and top-gates. Such processing results in devices with improved PVR (3.5) and stability of the electrical properties.


Nano Letters | 2012

Single InAs/GaSb Nanowire Low-Power CMOS Inverter

Anil Dey; Johannes Svensson; B. Mattias Borg; Martin Ek; Lars-Erik Wernersson

III-V semiconductors have so far predominately been employed for n-type transistors in high-frequency applications. This development is based on the advantageous transport properties and the large variety of heterostructure combinations in the family of III-V semiconductors. In contrast, reports on p-type devices with high hole mobility suitable for complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) circuits for low-power operation are scarce. In addition, the difficulty to integrate both n- and p-type devices on the same substrate without the use of complex buffer layers has hampered the development of III-V based digital logic. Here, inverters fabricated from single n-InAs/p-GaSb heterostructure nanowires are demonstrated in a simple processing scheme. Using undoped segments and aggressively scaled high-κ dielectric, enhancement mode operation suitable for digital logic is obtained for both types of transistors. State-of-the-art on- and off-state characteristics are obtained and the individual long-channel n- and p-type transistors exhibit minimum subthreshold swings of SS = 98 mV/dec and SS = 400 mV/dec, respectively, at V(ds) = 0.5 V. Inverter characteristics display a full signal swing and maximum gain of 10.5 with a small device-to-device variability. Complete inversion is measured at low frequencies although large parasitic capacitances deform the waveform at higher frequencies.


IEEE Electron Device Letters | 2012

High-Performance InAs Nanowire MOSFETs

Anil Dey; Claes Thelander; Erik Lind; Kimberly A. Dick; B. M. Borg; Magnus T. Borgström; Peter Nilsson; Lars-Erik Wernersson

In this letter, we present a 15-nm-diameter InAs nanowire MOSFET with excellent on and off characteristics. An n-i-n doping profile was used to reduce the source and drain resistances, and an Al<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>/HfO<sub>2</sub> bilayer was introduced in the high- process. The nanowires exhibit high drive currents, up to 1.25 A/mm, normalized to the nanowire circumference, and current densities up to 34 MA/cm<sup>2</sup>(V<sub>D</sub> = 0.5 V) . For a nominal L<sub>G</sub> = 100 nm, we observe an extrinsic transconductance (g_m) of 1.23 S/mm and a subthreshold swing of 93 mV/decade at V<sub>D</sub> = 10 mV .


Nano Letters | 2013

Combining Axial and Radial Nanowire Heterostructures: Radial Esaki Diodes and Tunnel Field-Effect Transistors

Anil Dey; Johannes Svensson; Martin Ek; Erik Lind; Claes Thelander; Lars-Erik Wernersson

The ever-growing demand on high-performance electronics has generated transistors with very impressive figures of merit (Radosavljevic et al., IEEE Int. Devices Meeting 2009, 1-4 and Cho et al., IEEE Int. Devices Meeting 2011, 15.1.1-15.1.4). The continued scaling of the supply voltage of field-effect transistors, such as tunnel field-effect transistors (TFETs), requires the implementation of advanced transistor architectures including FinFETs and nanowire devices. Moreover, integration of novel materials with high electron mobilities, such as III-V semiconductors and graphene, are also being considered to further enhance the device properties (del Alamo, Nature 2011, 479, 317-323, and Liao et al., Nature 2010, 467, 305-308). In nanowire devices, boosting the drive current at a fixed supply voltage or maintaining a constant drive current at a reduced supply voltage may be achieved by increasing the cross-sectional area of a device, however at the cost of deteriorated electrostatics. A gate-all-around nanowire device architecture is the most favorable electrostatic configuration to suppress short channel effects; however, the arrangement of arrays of parallel vertical nanowires to address the drive current predicament will require additional chip area. The use of a core-shell nanowire with a radial heterojunction in a transistor architecture provides an attractive means to address the drive current issue without compromising neither chip area nor device electrostatics. In addition to design advantages of a radial transistor architecture, we in this work illustrate the benefit in terms of drive current per unit chip area and compare the experimental data for axial GaSb/InAs Esaki diodes and TFETs to their radial counterparts and normalize the electrical data to the largest cross-sectional area of the nanowire, i.e. the occupied chip area, assuming a vertical device geometry. Our data on lateral devices show that radial Esaki diodes deliver almost 7 times higher peak current, Jpeak = 2310 kA/cm(2), than the maximum peak current of axial GaSb/InAs(Sb) Esaki diodes per unit chip area. The radial TFETs also deliver high peak current densities Jpeak = 1210 kA/cm(2), while their axial counterparts at most carry Jpeak = 77 kA/cm(2), normalized to the largest cross-sectional area of the nanowire.


Nano Letters | 2015

III–V Nanowire Complementary Metal–Oxide Semiconductor Transistors Monolithically Integrated on Si

Johannes Svensson; Anil Dey; Daniel Jacobsson; Lars-Erik Wernersson

III-V semiconductors have attractive transport properties suitable for low-power, high-speed complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) implementation, but major challenges related to cointegration of III-V n- and p-type metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs) on low-cost Si substrates have so far hindered their use for large scale logic circuits. By using a novel approach to grow both InAs and InAs/GaSb vertical nanowires of equal length simultaneously in one single growth step, we here demonstrate n- and p-type III-V MOSFETs monolithically integrated on a Si substrate with high I(on)/I(off) ratios using a dual channel, single gate-stack design processed simultaneously for both types of transistors. In addition, we demonstrate fundamental CMOS logic gates, such as inverters and NAND gates, which illustrate the viability of our approach for large scale III-V MOSFET circuits on Si.


IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society | 2015

III-V Heterostructure Nanowire Tunnel FETs

Erik Lind; Elvedin Memisevic; Anil Dey; Lars-Erik Wernersson

In this paper, InAs/GaSb nanowire tunnel field-effect transistors (TFETs) are studied theoretically and experimentally. A 2-band 1-D analytic tunneling model is used to calculate the on- and off-current levels of nanowire TFETs with staggered source/channel band alignment. Experimental results from lateral InAs/GaSb are shown, as well as first results on integration of vertical InAs/GaSb nanowire TFETs on Si substrates.

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