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A Ferroelectric Oxide Made Directly on Silicon

Authors :
NORTHWESTERN UNIV EVANSTON IL DEPT OF MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Warusawithana, Maitri P
Cen, Cheng
Sleasman, Charles R
Woicik, Joseph C
Li, Yulan
Kourkoutis, Lena F
Klug, Jeffrey A
Li, Hao
Ryan, Philip
Wang, Li-Peng
NORTHWESTERN UNIV EVANSTON IL DEPT OF MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Warusawithana, Maitri P
Cen, Cheng
Sleasman, Charles R
Woicik, Joseph C
Li, Yulan
Kourkoutis, Lena F
Klug, Jeffrey A
Li, Hao
Ryan, Philip
Wang, Li-Peng
Source :
DTIC
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors, formed using silicon dioxide and silicon, have undergone four decades of staggering technological advancement. With fundamental limits to this technology close at hand, alternatives to silicon dioxide are being pursued to enable new functionality and device architectures. We achieved ferroelectric functionality in intimate contact with silicon by growing coherently strained strontium titanate (SrTiO3) films via oxide molecular beam epitaxy in direct contact with silicon, with no interfacial silicon dioxide. We observed ferroelectricity in these ultrathin SrTiO3 layers by means of piezoresponse force microscopy. Stable ferroelectric nanodomains created in SrTiO3 were observed at temperatures as high as 400 kelvin.<br />Published in the Journal of Science, v324 p367-370, 17 April 2009.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
DTIC
Notes :
text/html, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn913588835
Document Type :
Electronic Resource