Materials Australia Magazine | April 2022 | Volume 55 | No.1

Page 25

INDUSTRY NEWS

Negative Capacitance in Topological Transistors Could Reduce Computing’s Unsustainable Energy Load Source: Sally Wood Australian researchers have discovered that negative capacitance could lower the energy used in electronics and computing, which represents 8 per cent of global electricity demand. The researchers at four universities within the ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies applied negative capacitance to make topological transistors switch at lower voltage. Together, this potentially reduces energy losses by a factor of ten or more

What Are Transistors? A transistor is an electronic switch. It has three terminals, or connections. A voltage applied to the gate terminal controls the current, which can flow between the other two terminals (the source and drain terminals). In computer chips, the transistors can be ‘on’ or ‘off.’ Switching a transistor on and off wastes a tiny amount of electrical energy each time. These transistors switch billions of times a second and lead to a lot of power being wasted as heat. “This is why your phone or laptop gets hot when you’re doing something that requires a lot of computations, such as processing a video,” said FLEET researcher, Professor Michael Fuhrer. According to the Decadal Plan for Semiconductors 2020, the imbalance between rising energy demands of ICT and available energy will ‘strongly limit’ future growth in computing. Today’s computer chips are all made of silicon, which is a semiconductor. These are insulators, or materials that normally do not conduct electricity. However, by adding a bit of extra electrical charge to a semiconductor, it makes it conduct. But FLEET researchers are working with new kinds of quantum materials called topological insulators, instead of silicon. These materials are insulating in their interiors, but conduct electricity on their boundaries.

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While the millions of transistors inside modern electronics are only micrometres in size, their function mirrors that of the familiar three-legged transistors of 1970s radios and home electronics kits.

Study authors left Dr Mark Edmonds, and right Prof Michael Fuhrer (School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University).

In fact, if they are three-dimensional, they conduct on their two-dimensional surfaces, and if they are very thin, they conduct along their one-dimensional edges.

These very promising results were recently reported at the prestigious International Electron Devices Meeting in San Francisco, and the work is already covered in a patent application.

FLEET researchers found that an electric field can be used to switch a material from topological insulator to a normal insulator. This allows a topological material to be used as a transistor, which is known as a topological quantum field-effect transistor (TQFET).

“There’s even more room for improvement,” said Professor Fuhrer.

They also found that these types of transistors can switch at a lower voltage than conventional materials, which overcomes the so-called ‘Boltzmann’s tyranny.’ This phenomenon sets the lower limit for the voltage required to switch a current at room temperature. FLEET researcher Muhammad Nadeem said, “The low-voltage switching comes about due to an effect called spin-orbit coupling, which is stronger in heavier elements like bismuth. We found that bismuth-based TQFETs could switch at half the voltage, and one-quarter the energy, of similar-sized conventional FETs.”

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How Can Capacitance Be Negative? A capacitor consists of two conductors separated by an insulator. It has a capacitance C, which expresses the amount of electrical charge (Q) on the metals when a voltage (V) is applied between them: C = Q/V. Normally this is a positive number. If it was negative, the capacitor would be inherently unstable. But ferroelectric materials have a spontaneous polarisation, which charges up its surfaces. As such, these materials can be thought of as having a negative capacitance in a certain regime.

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Articles inside

Feature - Materials Engineering for Australia’s Mining, Oil and Gas Sector

29min
pages 42-50

MA - Short Courses

5min
pages 51-52

Breaking News

17min
pages 36-41

Published in Nature Communications

3min
page 26

University Spotlight - Macquarie University

5min
pages 34-35

A Zigzag Blueprint for Topological Electronics

4min
pages 32-33

Empowering Battery Research and Production with Advanced Analytical Solutions

6min
pages 28-29

The Ideal MicroCT for Core Facility Labs – Combining Versatility and Performance

2min
page 27

Negative Capacitance in Topological Transistors Could Reduce Computing’s Unsustainable Energy Load

3min
page 25

Bionic Eye Study Paves the Way Towards Human Trials

3min
page 24

Why Your Material Analyser Won’t Keep You Awake at Night - But the Data Will

5min
pages 22-23

What Can Go Wrong?

3min
page 12

Miniature Devices Recognised on The Global Stage

3min
page 21

Swinburne’s AIR Hub To Drive The Future Of Aerospace

2min
page 20

Why You Should Become a CMatP

2min
page 17

WA Branch Annual Sir Frank Ledger Breakfast

4min
pages 10-11

From the President

3min
page 3

Our Certified Materials Professionals (CMatPs

3min
page 16
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