Access

Letter

Nature Nanotechnology 3, 603–608 (1 October 2008) | doi:10.1038/nnano.2008.267

CMOS-compatible fabrication of room-temperature single-electron devices

Vishva Ray , Ramkumar Subramanian , Pradeep Bhadrachalam , Liang-Chieh Ma , Choong-Un Kim & Seong Jin Koh

Devices in which the transport and storage of single electrons are systematically controlled could lead to a new generation of nanoscale devices and sensors. The attractive features of these devices include operation at extremely low power, scalability to the sub-nanometre regime and extremely high charge sensitivity. However, the fabrication of single-electron devices requires nanoscale geometrical control, which has limited their fabrication to small numbers of devices at a time, significantly restricting their implementation in practical devices. Here we report the parallel fabrication of single-electron devices, which results in multiple, individually addressable, single-electron devices that operate at room temperature. This was made possible using CMOS fabrication technology and implementing self-alignment of the source and drain electrodes, which are vertically separated by thin dielectric films. We demonstrate clear Coulomb staircase|[sol]|blockade and Coulomb oscillations at room temperature and also at low temperatures.