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Electrically Robust Single-Crystalline WTe2 Nanobelts for Nanoscale Electrical Interconnects.

Seunguk SongSe-Yang KimJinsung KwakYongsu JoJung Hwa KimJong Hwa LeeJae-Ung LeeJong Uk KimHyung Duk YunYeoseon SimJaewon WangDo Hee LeeShi-Hyun SeokTae-Il KimHyeonsik CheongZonghoon LeeSoon-Yong Kwon
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2018)
As the elements of integrated circuits are downsized to the nanoscale, the current Cu-based interconnects are facing limitations due to increased resistivity and decreased current-carrying capacity because of scaling. Here, the bottom-up synthesis of single-crystalline WTe2 nanobelts and low- and high-field electrical characterization of nanoscale interconnect test structures in various ambient conditions are reported. Unlike exfoliated flakes obtained by the top-down approach, the bottom-up growth mode of WTe2 nanobelts allows systemic characterization of the electrical properties of WTe2 single crystals as a function of channel dimensions. Using a 1D heat transport model and a power law, it is determined that the breakdown of WTe2 devices under vacuum and with AlO x capping layer follows an ideal pattern for Joule heating, far from edge scattering. High-field electrical measurements and self-heating modeling demonstrate that the WTe2 nanobelts have a breakdown current density approaching ≈100 MA cm-2, remarkably higher than those of conventional metals and other transition-metal chalcogenides, and sustain the highest electrical power per channel length (≈16.4 W cm-1) among the interconnect candidates. The results suggest superior robustness of WTe2 against high-bias sweep and its possible applicability in future nanoelectronics.
Keyphrases
  • transition metal
  • room temperature
  • air pollution
  • high resolution
  • risk assessment
  • mass spectrometry
  • heavy metals