Proposal for semiconductor-free negative differential resistance tunnel diode with ultra-high peak-to-valley current ratio
Ersoy Sasioglu, Ingrid Mertig

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel semiconductor-free negative differential resistance tunnel diode using cold metal electrodes separated by an insulator, achieving ultra-high peak-to-valley current ratios suitable for advanced memory and logic devices.
Contribution
The paper proposes a new semiconductor-free NDR diode concept based on cold metal electrodes and 2D materials, demonstrating ultra-high PVCR values through theoretical calculations.
Findings
Lateral diode achieves PVCR of 10^16 at room temperature.
Vertical diode exhibits PVCR of about 10^4.
The concept enables ultra-high PVCR NDR devices without semiconductors.
Abstract
The negative differential resistance (NDR) tunnel diodes are promising alternative devices for beyond-CMOS computing as they offer several potential applications when integrated with transistors. We propose a novel semiconductor-free NDR tunnel diode concept that exhibits an ultra-high peak-to-valley current ratio (PVCR) value. Our proposed NDR diode consists of two cold metal electrodes separated by a thin insulating tunnel barrier. The NDR effect stems from the unique electronic band structure of the cold metal electrodes, i.e., the width of the isolated metallic bands around the Fermi level as well as the energy gaps separating higher- and lower-lying bands determine the current-voltage (-) characteristics and the PVCR value of the tunnel diode. By proper choice of the cold metal electrode materials, either a conventional N-type or -type NDR effect can be obtained.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSemiconductor materials and devices · Graphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
