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RESEARCH
Science
Physics
Illinois researchers create
world's fastest transistor ... again
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
11/6/03
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The
world's fastest transisitor has a frequency of 509 gigahertz. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
have broken their own record for the world’s fastest transistor.
Their latest device,
with a frequency of 509 gigahertz, is 57 gigahertz faster than their
previous record holder and could find use in applications such as high-speed
communications products, consumer electronics and electronic combat
systems
."The steady
rise in the speed of bipolar transistors has relied largely on the vertical
scaling of the epitaxial layer structure to reduce the carrier transit
time," said Milton Feng, the Holonyak Professor of Electrical
and Computer Engineering at Illinois, whose team has been working
on high-speed compound semiconductor transistors since 1995. "However,
this comes at the cost of increasing the base-collector capacitance.
To compensate for this unwanted effect, we have employed lateral scaling
of both the emitter and the collector."
Feng and graduate students Walid Hafez and Jie-Wei Lai fabricated the
high-speed devices in the university’s Micro
and Nanotechnology Laboratory. Unlike traditional transistors, which
are built from silicon and germanium, the Illinois transistors are made
from indium phosphide and indium gallium arsenide.
"This material system is inherently faster than silicon germanium,
and can support a much higher current density," Feng said. "By
making the components smaller, the transistor can charge and discharge
more quickly, creating a significant improvement in speed."
During the past year, high-speed transistor records have fallen like
dominoes on the Illinois campus. In January, Feng’s group announced
a transistor with a 150-nanometer collector and a top frequency of 382
gigahertz. In May, the group reported a 452-gigahertz device with a
25-nanometer base and a 100-nanometer collector. Further scaling reduced
the collector size to 75 nanometers, resulting in a 509-gigahertz device,
announced last month.
In addition to using a high-speed material system and smaller device
components, another technique the researchers employed to boost transistor
speed utilized a narrow metal bridge to separate the base terminal from
the device connector post.
"Normally in transistors the contact size is bigger than the transistor
itself," Feng said. "Our micro-bridge eliminates the parasitic
base to collector capacitance that is inherent with designs that use
large base contact posts. By isolating the base, we can achieve higher
current density and faster device operation."
Faster transistors would enable the creation of faster computers and
video games, more flexible and secure wireless communications systems,
and more rapid analog-to-digital conversion for use in radar and other
electronic combat systems.
"Further vertical scaling of the epitaxial structure, combined
with lateral device scaling, should allow devices with even higher frequencies,"
Feng said. "Our ultimate goal is to make a terahertz transistor."
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency funded the work.
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