New Material Can Handle More
ElectricityTEMPE, Ariz., -- Oct. 21, 2003
-- Scientists at Motorola Labs are researching ways to improve control in the
growth of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) that can make transistors smaller and faster
and chemical/biological detectors
ultra-sensitive.
CNTs represent a relatively
new form of molecular carbon that was discovered only twelve years ago. Each
nanotube is formed with one or more seamless concentric cylinders consisting of
a rolled-up sheet of graphite. At the Tempe, Arizona facility of Motorola Labs,
researchers Ruth Zhang, Islamshah Amlani, John Tresek, and Larry Nagahara are
focusing on a category known as single-walled carbon nanotubes. As the name
implies, these consist of only a
single cylinder of carbon atoms and each
nanotube has a diameter as small as 1-5 nanometers or about one ten-thousandth
the diameter of a human hair.
Early research
indicates that CNTs have very promising mechanical and electrical
characteristics. Scientists studying CNTs have reported that they can be as
much as 100 times stronger than steel at a fraction of the weight. Other
studies showed that the metallic variety of CNTs has a current carrying
capability more than 100 times that of copper, while the semiconducting variety
can potentially be used for transistors that are smaller and faster than
conventional ones made with silicon.
One of the
technical challenges associated with CNT-based device technology is in
controlling the placement of nanotubes with specific properties on a substrate.
The Motorola Labs team has developed a technique using chemical vapor deposition
(CVD) that can position
individual single-walled carbon nanotubes at
pre-determined locations on a substrate in a highly parallel manner that is
compatible with conventional semiconductor processing techniques. Furthermore,
the team found that almost 90% of these nanotubes are semiconducting in nature.
Such results provide an important step forward in developing arrays of
ultra-small transistors using CNTs. Details of this work were published by the
Motorola Labs researchers in
Nano Letters (2003, volume 3, 731-735), and
also presented at the 2003 Electronics Materials
Conference.
“CNTs can play a very
significant role in the emergent technological area known as
nanotechnology,” said Ray Tsui, who leads the Nanoelectronics research
effort at Motorola Labs. “With diameters in the nanometer regime and a
very high length-to-diameter ratio, CNTs have unique properties that can
exploited to achieve extraordinary performance in a number of applications.
Having a high degree of control in the type and positioning of CNTs is critical
in moving this technology forward,” Tsui added. In addition to
researching advanced transistors, the Motorola Labs team also is collaborating
with researchers at Arizona State University to develop ultra-sensitive
chemical/biological sensors based on single-walled carbon nanotubes. Another
group at Motorola Labs is researching the use of CNTs for high-brightness flat
panel displays.
To further improve growth
control for the CVD technique, the Motorola Labs team also collaborated with
researchers led by Professor Jian-Min Zuo from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign to develop atomic resolution imaging via a novel electron
diffraction technique. The results were discussed in papers that appeared in
Science (2003, volume 300, 1419-1421) as well as in
Applied Physics
Letters (2003, volume 82, 2703-2705). With this technique, researchers can
now view CNTs three dimensionally with a resolution down to 0.1 nanometer, thus
resulting in a very accurate picture of its structural properties. This
provides a powerful tool to help monitor and optimize the growth process of
CNTs.
About Motorola
LabsMotorola Labs is the applied research arm
of Motorola, Inc., with a strong, global team of scientists and engineers
focused on delivering and developing new materials, technologies, architectures,
algorithms and processes for future systems, products and product enhancements.
Motorola also actively licenses technologies developed in the Labs. For more
information, please visit:
www.motorola.com/labs.
About
MotorolaMotorola, Inc. (NYSE:MOT) is a global
leader in wireless, automotive and broadband communications. Sales in 2002 were
$27.3 billion. Motorola is a global corporate citizen dedicated to ethical
business practices and pioneering important innovations that make things smarter
and life better, honored traditions that began when the company was founded 75
years ago this year. For more information, please visit
www.motorola.com.
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Contact:Margot
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