Correlating Internal Chemical and Physical Structure with Electrical Data for Nanoscale Molecular-Electronic Devices
POSTER
Abstract
The critical limitation for most nanoscale molecular-electronic devices is the lack of physical/chemical characterization accompanying electrical data. Present most device geometries and fabrication processes are incompatible with conventional photon and electron spectroscopies and scanning probe microscopies -- critical layers and interfaces are frequently inaccessibly buried inside the as-built device structures. We present the fabrication of a new stencil-based nanopore device geometry, along with techniques for studying the in-situ characterization of the as-build internal properties of these devices. These methods were developed in combination to allow the cleaving of completed device stacks at internal inorganic/organic interfaces in a UHV environment. This cleaving process exposes the uncontaminated and unaltered internal nanoscale chemical and physical structure in UHV for examination with a range of conventional tools. We specifically present on XPS, IR and STM data from several metal/organic-monolayer/metal device stacks of interest, and conclude by correlating temperature-dependant and IETS electrical data on nanoscale devices with the physical/chemical characterization.
Authors
-
Jason J. Blackstock
Quantum Science Research, HP Labs
-
William F. Stickle
HP Labs Corvallis
-
Carrie L. Donley
Quantum Science Research, HP Labs
-
Duncan R. Stewart
Quantum Science Research, HP Labs
-
R. Stanley Williams
Quantum Science Research, HP Labs, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA USA