Post-CMOS Compatible Aluminum Scandium Nitride/2D Channel Ferroelectric Field-Effect-Transistor
Xiwen Liu, Dixiong Wang, Jeffrey Zheng, Pariasadat Musavigharavi,, Jinshui Miao, Eric A. Stach, Roy H. Olsson III, Deep Jariwala

TL;DR
This paper introduces a CMOS-compatible ferroelectric FET using scandium-doped aluminum nitride and a 2D MoS2 channel, achieving high ON/OFF ratios and stable memory retention suitable for low-power memory and neuromorphic computing.
Contribution
The study presents the first integration of AlScN ferroelectric with a 2D semiconductor channel in a FE-FET, demonstrating promising memory performance and compatibility with CMOS processes.
Findings
ON/OFF ratio ~ 10^6
Stable memory retention for 10^4 seconds
Normalized memory window of 0.3 V/nm
Abstract
In 1963, Moll and Tarui suggested that the field-effect conductance of a semiconductor could be controlled by the remanent polarization of a ferroelectric (FE) material to create a ferroelectric field-effect transistor (FE-FET). However, subsequent efforts to produce a practical, compact FE-FET have been plagued by low retention and incompatibility with Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) process integration. These difficulties led to the development of trapped-charge based memory devices (also called floating gate or flash memory), and these are now the mainstream non-volatile memory (NVM) technology. Over the past two decades, advances in oxide FE materials have rejuvenated the field of ferroelectrics and made FE random access memories (FE-RAM) a commercial reality. Despite these advances, commercial FE-RAM based on lead zirconium titanate (PZT) has stalled at the 130 nm…
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