Non-volatile switches based on 2D materials for 5G/6G applications.
Invited
Abstract
Recently, non-volatile switching has been observed in various monolayer and multilayer 2D films[1]. In this contribution, we will show that wafer-scale 2D-materials such as MoS2 and hBN can be used for low-power non-volatile switches with applications in communications systems for 5G and 6G. The 2D-based RF switch is a metal-insulator-metal vertical structure made of two electrodes separated by a thin 2D film. It is promising for high-frequency operation because of the favorable scaling compared to other emerging technologies[2].
Owing to the ultimate thickness of the 2D dielectrics, cut-off frequency and switching time figures of merit are superior to those of existing solid state devices. From high-frequency electrical characterization (up to 500GHz, in the THz band) we determine a cut-off frequency figure of merit of 129THz. Furthermore, the switches are 50 times more efficient than other non-volatile switches in terms of a d.c. energy-consumption metric, which is an important consideration for ubiquitous mobile systems. To illustrate the potential of the devices in a real-life application scenario, we operate a switch to route a 125Gbps QAM-32 datastream at 300GHz.
References:
[1] R. Ge et al., Atomristor: Nonvolatile Resistance Switching in Atomic Sheets of Transition Metal Dichalcogenides, Nano Lett. 2018, 18, 434−441
[2] M. Kim et al., Analogue switches made from boron nitride monolayers for application in 5G and terahertz communication systems, Nat. Elec.,2020, 3,479–485
Owing to the ultimate thickness of the 2D dielectrics, cut-off frequency and switching time figures of merit are superior to those of existing solid state devices. From high-frequency electrical characterization (up to 500GHz, in the THz band) we determine a cut-off frequency figure of merit of 129THz. Furthermore, the switches are 50 times more efficient than other non-volatile switches in terms of a d.c. energy-consumption metric, which is an important consideration for ubiquitous mobile systems. To illustrate the potential of the devices in a real-life application scenario, we operate a switch to route a 125Gbps QAM-32 datastream at 300GHz.
References:
[1] R. Ge et al., Atomristor: Nonvolatile Resistance Switching in Atomic Sheets of Transition Metal Dichalcogenides, Nano Lett. 2018, 18, 434−441
[2] M. Kim et al., Analogue switches made from boron nitride monolayers for application in 5G and terahertz communication systems, Nat. Elec.,2020, 3,479–485
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Presenters
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Emiliano Pallecchi
Lille University of Science and Technology
Authors
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Emiliano Pallecchi
Lille University of Science and Technology
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Myungsoo Kim
Microelectronics Research Center, The University of Texas
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simon skrzypczak
Lille University of Science and Technology
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Henri Happy
Lille University of Science and Technology
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Deji Akinwande
University of Texas at Austin, Microelectronics Research Center, The University of Texas