PHOTO: Jerome Levy
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6 March 2008—Scientists at the University of
Pittsburgh say they have found a way to draw and erase
tiny nanometer-wide dots and lines that can conduct
electricity. The physicists hope that the discovery will
lead to a way to draw nanowires to connect devices on a
circuit and to change a circuit’s logic by simply
redrawing the devices. The technique could also lead to
new types of logic devices and ultrahigh-density data
storage components, say the scientists.
The process works like a nanoscale Etch A Sketch. The
lines are drawn on an insulating surface by dragging the
tip of an atomic
force microscope (AFM), a device that can
see individual atoms by dragging a supersharp tip across
them. For their drawing surface, University of
Pittsburgh physicist Jeremy Levy and his colleagues
chose a 1.2-nanometer layer of lanthanum aluminum oxide
deposited on top of strontium titanium oxide. The
interface between the two oxides is normally insulating,
but a positive voltage from the sharp metal microscope
tip creates a conductive spot underneath the tip at the
materials’ interface.
Erasing the conducting areas requires flipping the AFM
tip’s voltage. “So if we want to write a wire, we apply
a positive voltage and move the tip from point A to
point B,” Levy says. “Then if we want to cut the wire,
we apply a negative voltage and move the tip across the
wire and snap it in two.”
In a report published online at Nature Materials
on 2 March, the researchers showed how they could write
conducting lines, or wires, less than 4 nm wide using
the technique. They were also able to make an array of
2-nm-wide dots. These areas remained conductive for more
than 24 hours.
Why the material interface changes under the AFM tip
is speculation at this point. The researchers believe
that the microscope’s voltage creates an extremely
strong electric field across the lanthanum aluminum
oxide layer. A positive field rips away oxygen atoms,
freeing electrons that are normally bound to them. The
electrons jump down to the interface, where they can
move and carry current. A negative voltage adds an
oxygen atom to the surface, tying up free electrons.
“I find it pretty remarkable that they can
controllably write and rewrite a conducting path,” says
Hans Hilgenkamp, who researches oxide interfaces at the
University of Twente in the Netherlands.
The technique could find plenty of applications.
Wiring devices in a logic circuit is the obvious one.
Because the oxides are transparent, the process could
also be used in wiring the transistors that control
pixels in displays, Hilgenkamp says. “You would be able
to make very complicated high-density patterns of
connections,” he says.
Creating nanosize logic components is another
possibility. Being able to create patterns smaller than
10 nm to make nanoscale devices has proved to be a
“grand challenge,” says Stephen Streiffer, nanoscale
materials researcher at Argonne National Laboratory, in
Illinois. The Pittsburgh group has “been able to
demonstrate an extremely clever way to do patterning at
3 nanometers or below.” The technology will not replace
conventional silicon-based devices, Streiffer stresses,
but it nevertheless paves the way for new types of logic
devices and storage devices.
Pittsburgh’s Levy has lots of device ideas for the new
technique. The tiny conducting dots could be used to
make ultrahigh-density
storage devices, for example, where a
conducting spot is a “1” bit and a dot that does not
conduct is a “0,” he suggests. The technique could also
be advanced to create a transistor-like logic switch,
Levy says. In conventional field-effect transistors—the
cornerstone device of logic circuits—voltage at a gate
electrode turns a conducting channel on and off. Levy
says they can do the same thing using an AFM tip instead
of a gate electrode.
Levy and his colleagues also point out that oxide
materials could potentially be combined with silicon
technology; other research groups have reported growing
high-quality strontium titanium oxide films on silicon.
Scientists study complex oxide materials and their
interfaces because they have shown a number of
surprising properties. “[Oxide interfaces] can be metals
and insulators and have magnetic behavior, ferroelectric
[behavior], or superconducting behavior,” Levy says.
“This work shows that you could control properties of
devices really down to the atomic scale,” Twente’s
Hilgenkamp says. “It would be very interesting to see if
you could tune magnetism on an atomic scale.”