Vasili Perebeinos, Jerry Tersoff
Nano Letters
Structural arrays with nanoscale spacing arise in many device concepts. Carbon nanotube transistors are an extreme example, where a practical technology will require arrays of parallel nanotubes with spacing of order 10 nm or less. We show that with decreasing pitch there is a first-order transition, from a robust structure in which the metal wets the substrate between tubes, to a poorly wetting structure in which the metal rides atop the nanotube array without touching the substrate. The latter is analogous to the superhydrophobic "lotus leaf effect." There is a sharp minimum in the delamination energy of metal contacts at the transition pitch. We discuss implications for contact resistance and possible mitigation strategies.
Vasili Perebeinos, Jerry Tersoff
Nano Letters
Abram L. Falk, Kuan-Chang Chiu, et al.
Physical Review Letters
Chendong Zhang, Yuxuan Chen, et al.
Nature Communications
Aaron D. Franklin, Shu-Jen Han, et al.
IEEE Electron Device Letters