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FCRP - FENA & NRI-WIN Needs of Theory and Simulation for Nanoarchitectonics (FENA and WIN) Kang L. Wang Kang L. Wang Raytheon Professor of Physical Sciences Raytheon Professor of Physical Sciences Center on Functional Engineered NanoArchitectonics -- FENA (www.fena.org ) Western Institute of Nanoelectronics -- WIN (www.win-nano.org ) University of California - Los Angeles Los Angeles, California 90095 –1594 (Ph: 310-825-1609 // Fax: 310-206-7154 // E-mail: [email protected])

Needs of Theory and Simulation for N Nanoarchitectonics I ...baton.phys.lsu.edu/~jdowling/qmhp/talks/wang.pdf · consistent field theory Device Working Principles Physics, Chemistry

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Page 1: Needs of Theory and Simulation for N Nanoarchitectonics I ...baton.phys.lsu.edu/~jdowling/qmhp/talks/wang.pdf · consistent field theory Device Working Principles Physics, Chemistry

FCR

P - F

ENA

& N

RI-W

IN

Needs of Theory and Simulation forNanoarchitectonics

(FENA and WIN)

Kang L. WangKang L. WangRaytheon Professor of Physical SciencesRaytheon Professor of Physical Sciences

Center on Functional Engineered NanoArchitectonics -- FENA(www.fena.org)

Western Institute of Nanoelectronics -- WIN(www.win-nano.org)

University of California - Los AngelesLos Angeles, California 90095 –1594

(Ph: 310-825-1609 // Fax: 310-206-7154 // E-mail:[email protected])

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FENA and WIN

High Functionalityand Throughput asbenchmarked withscaled CMOS

Low powerdissipation

Variability Total solutions –

materials,technologies andother supports

system software

systemssystems

structuresstructures

materialsmaterials

physicsPhysics and chemistry

Nanoarchitecturecircuits

devices/interconnect

platform / architecture

application software

Logic Switch replacementby 2020CMOS Technology

Augmentation

15 Institutions42 Faculty

60 Students +30 postdocs

Spin Devices

Spin Circuits

Benchmark and MetricsStanford

CITRIS

NNIN

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Predicting Atomic Structure ofNanosystems

Structure/Interface

Properties

Device Performance

Today’s electronics- charge

Known precisely(i.e., diamond Si)

Can becalculated and/ormeasured

Usually not knownprecisely yet

Nano-electronicsNew state variables:e.g.,Spin, Molecule

Difficult to predictsince structuresnot known

We need methods that can reliably predictmicroscopic atomic structures of nanoelectronicdevices (equilibrium and non-equilibrium)!

Nanomaterials/ Processing

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Theory and Simulation

Predicting materials andstructure properties Alchemy Properties

Self assembly and DirectedSelf Assembly (templating) Drivers: Physical, Chemical and

Biochemical (DNA) Energetic and atomic scale Ab Initio self consistent and self

consistent field theory Device Working Principles

Physics, Chemistry Exploratory concepts Simulation/modeling

Interface

Close Collaborations among the theory and simulation talents Seamless interface Working close with Experiments

The needs: Key problems

Charge and Alternatestate variables for lowdissipation andvariability Spin Molecule/ phase transition

Device/performance Molecule devices Spintronics

Heterogeneous integration

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Modeling Across Time and LengthScales

Quantum Mechanics

Atomic Kinetics

Continuum Modeling

Need efficient, accurate and general first-principlesmethods for realistic simulations of synthesis,processing (assembly), manufacturing and operationof nanoelectronic devices and nanosystems.

Length

Time

Non-equilibriumDissipative

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Predicting Material Properties & Patterns

Left: Calculated effective inter-atomic interactions in Fe-Ag/Ru.

Simulated diffuse x-ray scatteringpattern for Fe-Ag nanowires on Ru. Simulated surface structure of Fe-

Ag/Ru, showing stripe formation.

Predictable regular patterned templates for directed self-assembly of nanostructures Be able to predict self assembled structures from ab initio (Self consistent

NEGF)VidvudsOzolins(UCLA)

GlennFredrickson

(UCSB)

• Example of a numerical SCFT (self-consistentfield theory ) simulation of 8 unit cells of theIa3d “gyroid” phase of diblock copolymers.

• This project aims to develop a similar high-resolution SCFT for thin block copolymerfilms relevant to nanoscale lithography

Simulation of block copolymer assemblyfor nanoscale lithography

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Rotaxane: Mechanically-Interlocked Moleculefor Next Generations of nanosystems

• Develop rotaxane-based memory device• Device characteristics: Ultra-high Density

and Stable Response

Prof. William A. Goddard, and Seung Soon JangGraduate student: Hyungjun KimCollaboration with Prof. J. Fraser StoddartRing Location (x)

Ener

gy (e

V)

OFFON

-e–

OFF

ON

0

ΔG‡

IonizationPotential

ΔG

+e–

Molecular conformation as a state variable

• 160 Kbit memory fabricated and tested @ 1011

bits/cm2 +- 2 operation.

• Crossbar: 400 Si nanowire bottom electrodesand 400 crossing Ti nanowire top electrodes(wires: 16 nm diameter / 16.5 nm half pitch)

1 2 2~ exp ( )

store b

tun

ma E

P!

" #= $ %$ %

& 'h

mLtsw~

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First-Principles Interface Engineering

Nanoelectronics will includemetal & semiconductornanostructures, organic (andbio) molecules.

Importance of interfacesincreases with decreasingfeature size.

Need first-principles methods to:• Understand, predict and optimize the structure and

thermodynamic stability of interfaces in nanosystems• Predict charge and spin transport across nano-

interfaces

Pentanethiol SAM on Au(111)

Page 9: Needs of Theory and Simulation for N Nanoarchitectonics I ...baton.phys.lsu.edu/~jdowling/qmhp/talks/wang.pdf · consistent field theory Device Working Principles Physics, Chemistry

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Rotaxane

TTF (OFF) DNP (ON)Positively chargedmonopyridine

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8

10

0 10 20 30 40 50

Coordinate (Angstrom)

Me

an

Fo

rce

(kcal/m

ol A

)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

0 10 20 30 40 50

Coordinate (Angstrom)

Po

ten

tia

l o

f M

ea

n F

orc

e

(kc

al/

mo

l)

Free Energy Barrier ~ 60 kcal/mol

Rotaxane: Mechanically-Interlocked MoleculeCurrent work

( ) ( )( )R

rxn

rxn rxn

dF RF R F dR

dR!

"# $"= ! % %& '"( )

*Mean Force

Potential of Mean Force Approach

How to control the free energy barrier between the ON state and the OFF state

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Self assembled nanoarchitectonics and theirheterogeneous integration on Si

Approach: Directed self-assembly using PNA- I-junction dsPNA, T-junction dsPNA

Electrical characterization of I- and T- junction

SWNT

PNA

100 nm

100 nm

SWNT

SWNT

PNA

Mihri Ozkan(UCR)

CNT – Molecular RTDRequires accurate modelingof Structure Excited states Non-equilibrium

potential Electron / phonon

interaction Vibrational modes Phonon (thermal)

transport

Roger Lake(UCR)

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Simulations of Self-Synthesized FunctionalDevices.

Bio-assembled CNTFETs – DNA and PNAassembly First simulations of the CNT-ssDNA-CNT system.

Experimentally measured I-Vof CNT-ssDNA-CNT

FIREBALL / NEGF calculations oftransmission and spectral functions at

transmission peaks a and b.

CNTFET drain current vs.gate voltage for different

lead doping

Non-equilibrium Green’s function Dissipation

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Example of Interface Geometry Effect

CNTs connected by conjugated molecules

Left: CNT-(CH)20-CNT with the polyacetylene co-planar with the tangential plane of the CNT (topstructure) and perpendicular to the tangentialplane of the CNT (bottom structure) at the pointof contact.

Transmission for the co-planar geometry is, on average, 3-ordersof magnitude larger than transmission for the perpendiculargeometry.

Electron transfer is a strong function of the interface geometry.

Relaxed

E.G. X. Guo et al., “Covalently Bridging Gaps in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubeswith Conducting Molecules,” Science 311, 356 (2006).

Right: Transmission versus energy plotfor both structures. The CNTs aremetallic (12,0).

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Simulation and Computation of NovelEngineered Nanomaterials and Devices

Phonon engineering: enhance electrontransport in nanoscale transistor channels andimprovement of heat removal and thermalmanagement to guide device design Alex Balandin

(UCR)

• The results (Nano Letters,2006) overturn conventionalbelieve that the phononconfinement effects arealways detrimental to thecarrier mobility.

• Carrier mobility in Sinanowires can be greatlyenhanced by embedding thenanowires within hardmaterials such as diamond.

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Ultra-scaled device modeling needs

3D quantum mechanical electrostatics /band structure and physical transportmodels for devices-including strain, high-k/metal gate, UTB, and surface orientationeffects

Physical models for transport in beyond-Sidevices (Ge, III-V) enabling performanceprediction/analysis

Efficient simulation of dissipative QMtransport, especially using a comprehensiveset of scattering mechanisms

H.H. Hosack, Frontiers in Comp. Nanoelect., 2/20/07, Indianapolis,https://www.nanohub.org/resources/2380/

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Theory and Simulation – WIN(Spintronics) Spin materials

DMS Multiferroic materials and devices Room temperature materials

Electric field control devices – Rashba (spin orbit interaction) Active control of dynamics: e.g., Spin torque

Spin Hall effects Theoretical foundation

Spin and Magnetic Devices – Empirical approach in simulation Switching mechanisms: Spin transport Need to have fundamental approach: collective phenomena

Device models for circuits

Self consistent – NEGF Non-equilibrium quantum mechanics Theory of damping, dissipation Many body effects

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Atomic-Level Materials Design

Theory can suggest: Which specific material or ordered structure has desired

properties How to grow such a structure experimentally

Example: Raising the Curie temperature of a magnetic semiconductor(Ga,Mn)As for spintronics applications

A. Franceschetti, S.V. Dudiy, S.V. Barabash, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 047202 (2006).

Unoptimized Ga0.75Mn0.25As(random alloy)

Optimized Ga0.75Mn0.25As:(201) superlattice

Tc~240K — too low Tc~360K — sufficient to use

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Atomic-Level Materials

For spintronics, atomic-level optimization couldtarget:

Raising ferromagnetic transition temperature Tc Ensuring magnetic semiconductors indeed half-metals

(avoiding structures that mix spin channels in magnetic state) Adjusting doping-dependent profiles Increasing barriers for unwanted defects Impurity

Example: half-metallicity in magnetic (Ga,Mn)As

• Calculation predicts that in perfectly randomGa1-xMnxAs,both spin-up and spin-down densities of states(DOS) become non-zero at εF by x=0.125.

• Can atomic-level optimization bring back half-metallic properties that are vital for spintronicsapplications?

Figure adopted from:E.Kulatov, H.Nakayama et al., Phys. Rev. B 66, 045203 (2002).

Ga0.875Mn0.125As

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Theoretical Work and NumericalModeling:

Empircal Logic device functionality using spin

wave superposition Nano architectures with spin wave bus

Gated Spin Wave Devices & Bus –A. Khitun and K Wang

Spin wave propagationestablished

Spin wave resonancefrequency occurring atf ~ H1/2

0( 4 )H H M! " #= +

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

External magnetic field (Oe)

Amplitude changes (dB)

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

4.0

4.5

5.0

5.5

6.0

Fre

quency

(G

Hz)

-4dB

-3dB

-2dB

-1dB

0dB

1dB

2dB

3dB

4dB

Alex Khitun(UCLA)

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Spin Transistors -- Spin current amplifierJoachim Stöhr

Achievement: Direct observation of spin transfer switching by x-ray microscopy.

Joachim Stöhr – SLACwith Yves Acremann

d) 8.6 ns e) 9.0 ns f) 9.6 ns

g) 12.0 ns h) 12.2ns

i) 13.2 ns

a) 0 ns b) 0.15ns

c) 0.6ns

a

b

c

def

ih

gb

c

de fg hh

i

Y. Acremann et al., PRL 96, 217202/1-4 (2006)

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Spin Device Modeling

Spin Hall Field EffectTransistor: does not requireelectron transport and hencecan potentially be an lowdissipating device

Quantum Spin Hall Helicaledge states

Support and GuideExperiments

Quantum Spin Hall Field Effect Transistor

Science, 314 1757 (2006)

B (T) -0.06 0 0.06

θ K (µ

rad)

0

4

-4T = 20 K 3 mV/µm

y = -48 µm

y = +48 µm

xy

kjs

B E

David Awschalom

Quantum phase transitionSpin Orbit interaction

SC Zhang(Stanford)

T = 295 K-0.05 0.0 0.05

B (T)

θ K (µ

rad)

-0.3

0.3

0.0

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In A Nutshell

Nanomaterials Assembly and nanopatterning

Alternate state variables Spin variables: electron, nuclear spin, spin

waves Molecular state, Phase transition, Dipole,

Phase, Spin FET, Spin torque, Spin wave packets

propagation

Devices New principles Non-equilibrium

Hetergeneous Nanosystems Integrated Efforts

Theoretical approach to come to closeexperimental

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Acknowledgments

All the FENA and WIN participants All students, postdoctoral fellows and

visitors as well as collaborators aroundthe world

Support: SRC, NSF, Marco, NERC, ARO, AFOSR,ONR, DARPA and many industrial companies

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Contact Info

Kang Wang (Director): [email protected];[email protected]

Kos Galatsis (COO): [email protected],[email protected]

Admin: [email protected], [email protected]

FENA Center and WINRoom 5289 Boelter Hall

University of California, Los AngelesLos Angeles, CA 90095-1594