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Negative capacitance in topological transistors could reduce computing's unsustainable energy load
TechXplore ^ | 16 December 2021 | FLEET

Posted on 12/16/2021 2:38:55 PM PST by ShadowAce

Australian researchers have discovered that negative capacitance could lower the energy used in electronics and computing, which represents 8 percent of global electricity demand.

The researchers at four universities within the ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies (FLEET) applied to make topological switch at lower voltage, potentially reducing energy losses by a factor of 10 or more.

These very promising results are reported this week at the prestigious International Electron Devices Meeting in San Francisco. And while challenges remain to making a working benchtop device, the work is covered in a patent application.

What are transistors?

A transistor is an . It has three terminals, or connections: a voltage applied to the gate terminal controls the current which can flow between other two terminals (called the source and drain terminals). In computer chips, the transistors can be "on" (i.e., current can flow) or "off" (current is blocked), representing the ones and zeroes that comprise binary logic operations.

Switching a transistor on and off requires wasting a tiny amount of electrical energy each time. But with the computer chips that make all of our electronic devices work contain millions or even billions of transistors, all switching billions of times a second (at gigahertz frequencies), this adds up to a lot of power being wasted as heat. "This is why your phone or laptop gets hot when you're doing something that requires a lot of computations, such as processing a video," says FLEET researcher Prof Michael Fuhrer (Monash).

All together, information communication and technology (ICT) consumes about 8 percent of global electricity supply –a staggering amount of electricity that is doubling every decade. According to the Decadal Plan for Semiconductors released in 2020, the imbalance between rising energy demands of ICT and available energy will 'strongly limit' future growth in computing.

Today's computer chips are all made of silicon, a semiconductor. Semiconductors are insulators, materials that normally don't conduct electricity. However, adding a bit of extra electrical charge to a semiconductor makes it conduct. This ability of silicon to switch on and off is the basis of the field-effect transistor (FET): the gate is connected by a capacitor to a slice of semiconductor running between source and drain terminals. A voltage on the gate charges that capacitor, and the extra charge on the semiconductor allows current to flow from source to drain.

Topological insulators

Instead of silicon, FLEET researchers are working with new kinds of quantum materials called . These materials are insulating in their interiors, but conduct electricity on their boundaries: If they are three-dimensional then they conduct on their two-dimensional surfaces, and if they're very thin (two-dimensional) they conduct along their one-dimensional edges.

Topological transistors

FLEET researchers found that an electric field can be used to switch a material from topological insulator (which conducts electricity along its edges) to a normal insulator (which doesn't conduct at all). This allows a topological material to be used as a transistor, called a topological quantum field-effect transistor (TQFET).

Earlier this year, FLEET researchers discovered that the TQFET can switch at a lower voltage than a conventional FET, overcoming the so-called Boltzmann's tyranny which sets the lower limit for the voltage required to switch a current at room temperature. FLEET researcher Muhammad Nadeem (University of Wollongong) says, "The low-voltage switching comes about due to an effect called spin-orbit coupling, which is stronger in heavier elements like bismuth. We found that bismuth-based TQFETs could switch at half the voltage, and one-quarter the energy, of similar-sized conventional FETs."

Recently, the team found that they could lower the voltage, and the energy, much further by using a negative capacitor to connect the topological material to the gate terminal.

How can capacitance be negative?

A capacitor consists of two conductors separated by an insulator. It has a capacitance C, which expresses the amount of electrical charge Q on the metals when a voltage V is applied between them: C = Q/V. Normally this is a positive number. If it was negative, the capacitor would be inherently unstable, and would want to charge up without applying any external voltage.

But that's exactly what a ferroelectric material does; it has a spontaneous polarization, which charges up its surfaces. So a ferroelectric material can be thought of as having a negative capacitance in a certain regime, though this regime is not normally accessible because it is unstable.

Salahuddin and Datta proposed in 2008 that a ferroelectric material could act as a negative capacitor in combination with the (positive) gate capacitance of an FET, to make a combined capacitor that is positive and stable. The net result is to amplify the electric field in a FET. They thought this might allow the FET to switch at lower voltage.

"Unfortunately, due to some very subtle effects in the way FETs work, the negative capacitance idea hasn't proved very useful in conventional FETs," says FLEET researcher A/Prof Dmitrie Culcer (UNSW). "The voltage lowering due to negative capacitance disappears in a well-designed FET, so it seems there's not much to be gained using a negative capacitor."

Negative capacitance boosts topological transistors

Recently, a team of FLEET researchers at Centre nodes Monash, RMIT, University of Wollongong and UNSW realized that this is not so for the TQFET. Adding a negative capacitance (a ferroelectric material) to make a negative capacitance TQFET (NC-TQFET) amplifies the electric field, which enables switching at much lower voltages and energies. "The TQFET uses electric field for switching, so can benefit directly from the amplification that's provided by the negative capacitance," says FLEET researcher Prof Jared Cole (RMIT).

The team reported the results at the 2021 International Electron Devices Meeting in San Francisco this week. They calculate that a bismuth-based NC-TQFET using La-doped HfO2 as a ferroelectric (this ferroelectric material has already successfully been integrated with silicon) could achieve ten times lower switching energy than a state-of-the-art silicon FET. "There's even more room for improvement," said Fuhrer, "more advanced ferroelectrics with larger remnant polarizations could enable switching at even lower energies."

However, many challenges remain to making a working NC-TQFET on the benchtop. Bismuth-based topological insulators with the right structure haven't yet been made and tested experimentally, and integrating those materials with ferroelectric layers would pose a further challenge. Still, the NC-TQFET provides a clear blueprint for lowering the energy in future transistors.

The FLEET researchers have applied for a patent on the NC-TQFET concept, and FLEET is looking for opportunities to work with partners to develop the technology further. Topological transistors were last year added to the IEEE International Roadmap for Devices and Systems, the internationally agreed blueprint guiding exponential advances in semiconductor technology (mapped by the famous Moore's Law) and includes plans for "More Moore," "More than Moore" and beyond-CMOS technologies.

"Proposal for a Negative Capacitance Topological Quantum Field-Effect Transistor" was presented at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' International Electron Devices Meeting 16 December 2021.


TOPICS: Technical
KEYWORDS: capacitors; hardware
Hat tip to Red Badger for the link!
1 posted on 12/16/2021 2:38:55 PM PST by ShadowAce
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To: rdb3; JosephW; martin_fierro; Still Thinking; zeugma; Vinnie; ironman; Egon; raybbr; AFreeBird; ...

2 posted on 12/16/2021 2:39:19 PM PST by ShadowAce (Linux - The Ultimate Windows Service Pack )
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To: ShadowAce

The Flux Capacitor at last!


3 posted on 12/16/2021 2:43:57 PM PST by E. Pluribus Unum ("Communism is not love. Communism is a hammer which we use to crush the enemy." ― Mao Zedong)
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To: ShadowAce
Negative capacitance in topological transistors could reduce computing's unsustainable energy load


4 posted on 12/16/2021 2:45:46 PM PST by Magnum44 (...against all enemies, foreign and domestic...)
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To: ShadowAce

Negative capacitance is just another way of saying the energy is stored somewhere else, not in the electric field between the plates. This isn’t some spooky new effect; I was using commerical ferroelectric RAM starting almost 20 years ago.


5 posted on 12/16/2021 2:47:47 PM PST by backwoods-engineer (But what do I know? I'm just a backwoods engineer.)
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To: ShadowAce
Recently, the team found that they could lower the voltage, and the energy, much further by using a negative capacitor to connect the topological material to the gate terminal.


6 posted on 12/16/2021 2:51:04 PM PST by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
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To: ShadowAce

Australian researchers, eh? So is this negative capacitance linked to the water in the toilet spinning in the other direction...? ;)


7 posted on 12/16/2021 2:58:35 PM PST by MikeGranby
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To: ShadowAce

I had a six transistor when I was a kid.


8 posted on 12/16/2021 3:00:22 PM PST by Repeat Offender (While the wicked stand confounded, call me with Thy saints surrounded.)
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To: backwoods-engineer

Just think, now we can shell out less $ to power our bitcoin mining boxes :-)


9 posted on 12/16/2021 3:11:07 PM PST by Bobalu (Figure out what you like, learn enough to be dangerous, and then start fiddling around)
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To: ShadowAce

I tried that in my AI. She got negative about everything.


10 posted on 12/16/2021 3:27:09 PM PST by DannyTN
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To: ShadowAce

The way I see it, there are Men, and there are Women.
But my local school system is teaching very young kids about topological transistors and I think it’s awful.


11 posted on 12/16/2021 3:28:11 PM PST by ClearCase_guy (Mass hypnosis of society. So many people are blind to the Truth which is in front of them.)
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To: ClearCase_guy

I would say not to worry as long as your school understands the difference between topological transistors and biological trans.

But they can’t even tell the difference between Men and Women any more.


12 posted on 12/16/2021 3:32:03 PM PST by DannyTN
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To: ShadowAce

While I’m grateful for some actual science here (not the fake scientism daily spewed by Corporate Media), the context given for it is the usual garbage that electricity usage is bad, people are evil, etc.


13 posted on 12/16/2021 3:36:42 PM PST by No_Mas_Obama
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To: ShadowAce

Every new cryptocurrency will need a new server farm. Keep building windmills.


14 posted on 12/16/2021 3:48:59 PM PST by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
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To: ShadowAce

It’s nice to see a real science article. Too bad there are only a few of these in general circulation vs the billions and billions of “media science” jokes available from the usual gang of idiots in the media.


15 posted on 12/16/2021 3:59:22 PM PST by Da Coyote
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To: ShadowAce

My guess is that this would be unstable. Very influenced by external noise.


16 posted on 12/16/2021 4:20:40 PM PST by Revel
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To: ShadowAce

Bump for later.


17 posted on 12/16/2021 4:30:50 PM PST by momincombatboots (Ephesians 6... who you are really at war with. )
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To: ShadowAce

This is a very interesting, and to me unexpected, development.

I hope the US and Israel can master this before the Chinese.

I can envision a lot more benefits than power reduction. Switching speed might be able to be ramped up by an order of magnitude, or more. However, there will definitely be problems with noise that crop up. Hmmm... thinking about that just a little longer: it could result in quantum effects being available at room temperatures and therefore room temperature quantum computers, eventually.


18 posted on 12/19/2021 10:45:16 AM PST by AFPhys ((Liberalism is what Smart looks like to Stupid people - ® - Mia of KC. Rush - 1:50-8/21/15))
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