Paper
1 February 2001 Room-temperature single-hole silicon memory cell
Nikolai T. Bagraev, Alexei D. Bouravleuv, Leonid E. Klyachkin, Anna M. Malyarenko, Serguei A. Rykov
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 4348, Fourth International Workshop on Nondestructive Testing and Computer Simulations in Science and Engineering; (2001) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.417634
Event: Fourth International Workshop on Nondestructive Testing and Computer Simulations in Science and Engineering, 2000, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Abstract
We present the findings of the room temperature operation that is demonstrated by the single-hole silicon memory cell in which the single-hole silicon transistor is used as an electrometer. This memory cell is performed on the basis of the quantum wire and the quantum dot which is self-assembly formed as a multiple-tunnel junction by short-time diffusion of boron into the Si(100)-wafer. The single-hole device obtained exhibits the Coulomb oscillations and the memory effects as a hysteresis in CV characteristics which are respectively revealed by varying the gate and drain-source voltage in the process of the local tunneling spectroscopy measurements.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nikolai T. Bagraev, Alexei D. Bouravleuv, Leonid E. Klyachkin, Anna M. Malyarenko, and Serguei A. Rykov "Room-temperature single-hole silicon memory cell", Proc. SPIE 4348, Fourth International Workshop on Nondestructive Testing and Computer Simulations in Science and Engineering, (1 February 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.417634
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KEYWORDS
Diffusion

Quantum dots

Silicon

Transistors

Scanning tunneling microscopy

Capacitance

Boron

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