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The main promise of tunnel FETs (TFETs) is to enable supply voltage ($V_{DD}$) scaling in conjunction with dimension scaling of transistors to reduce power consumption. However, reducing $V_{DD}$ and channel length ($L_{ch}$) typically deteriorates the ON- and OFF-state performance of TFETs, respectively. Accordingly, there is not yet any report of a high perfor]mance TFET with both low V$_{DD}$ ($sim$0.2V) and small $L_{ch}$ ($sim$6nm). In this work, it is shown that scaling TFETs in general requires scaling down the bandgap $E_g$ and scaling up the effective mass $m^*$ for high performance. Quantitatively, a channel material with an optimized bandgap ($E_gsim1.2qV_{DD} [eV]$) and an engineered effective mass ($m*^{-1}sim40 V_{DD}^{2.5} [m_0^{-1}]$) makes both $V_{DD}$ and $L_{ch}$ scaling feasible with the scaling rule of $L_{ch}/V_{DD}=30~nm/V$ for $L_{ch}$ from 15nm to 6nm and corresponding $V_{DD}$ from 0.5V to 0.2V.
Tunneling field-effect transistors (TFETs) based on 2D materials are promising steep sub-threshold swing (SS) devices due to their tight gate control. There are two major methods to create the tunnel junction in these 2D TFETs: electrical and chemica
Atomically precise donor-based quantum devices are a promising candidate for scalable solid-state quantum computing. Atomically precise design and implementation of the tunnel coupling in these devices is essential to realize gate-tunable exchange co
We measure the current vs voltage (I-V) characteristics of a diodelike tunnel junction consisting of a sharp metallic tip placed at a variable distance d from a planar collector and emitting electrons via electric-field assisted emission. All curves
In a continuous search for the energy-efficient electronic switches, a great attention is focused on tunnel field-effect transistors (TFETs) demonstrating an abrupt dependence of the source-drain current on the gate voltage. Among all TFETs, those ba
We report the realization of top-gated graphene nanoribbon field effect transistors (GNRFETs) of ~10 nm width on large-area epitaxial graphene exhibiting the opening of a band gap of ~0.14 eV. Contrary to prior observations of disordered transport an