
Artist’s rendering of a 2D material undergoing phase change using a transistor-scale platform developed in the lab of Stephen Wu, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and of physics. (University of Rochester illustration / Michael Osadciw)
Two-dimensional (2D) materials—as thin as a single layer of atoms—have intrigued scientists with their flexibility, elasticity, and unique electronic properties since first being discovered in materials such as graphene in 2004. Some of these materials can be especially susceptible to changes in their material properties as they are stretched and pulled. Under applied strain, they have been predicted to undergo phase transitions as disparate as superconducting in one moment to nonconducting the next, or optically opaque in one moment to transparent in the next.
Now, University of Rochester researchers have combined 2D materials with oxide materials in a new way, using a transistor-scale device platform, to fully explore the capabilities of these changeable 2D materials to transform electronics, optics, computing, and a host of other technologies.
“We’re opening up a new direction of study,” says Stephen Wu, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and physics. “There’s a huge number of 2D materials with different properties—and if you stretch them, they will do all sorts of things.”
The platform developed in Wu’s lab, configured much like traditional transistors, allows a small flake of a 2D material to be deposited onto a ferroelectric material. Voltage applied to the ferroelectric—which acts like a transistor’s third terminal, or gate—strains the 2D material by the piezoelectric effect, causing it to stretch. That, in turn, triggers a phase change that can completely alter the way the material behaves. When the voltage is turned off, the material retains its phase until an opposite polarity voltage is applied, causing the material to revert to its original phase.
“The ultimate goal of two-dimensional straintronics is to take all of the things that you couldn’t control before, like the topological, superconducting, magnetic, and optical properties of these materials, and now be able to control them, just by stretching the material on a chip,” Wu says.
“If you do this with topological materials you could impact quantum computers, or if you do it with superconducting materials you can impact superconducting electronics.”
Maxing out Moore’s Law
In a paper in Nature Nanotechnology, Wu and his students describe using a thin film of two-dimensional molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2) in the device platform. When stretched and unstretched, the MoTe2 changes from a low conductivity semiconductor material to a highly conductive semimetallic material and back again.
“It operates just like a field effect transistor. You just have to put a voltage on that third terminal, and the MoTe2 will stretch a little bit in one direction and become something that’s conducting. Then you stretch it back in another direction, and all of a sudden you have something that has low conductivity,” Wu says.
The process works at room temperature, he adds, and, remarkably, “requires only a small amount of strain—we’re stretching the MoTe2 by only 0.4 percent to see these changes.”
Moore’s Law famously predicts that the number of transistors in a dense, integrated circuit will double about every two years.
Yet technology is nearing the limits at which traditional transistors can be scaled down in size. So, as we reach the limits of Moore’s Law, the technology developed in Wu’s lab could have far-reaching implications in moving past these limitations in the quest for ever faster, more enhanced computing power.
Wu’s platform has the potential to perform the same functions as a transistor with far less power consumption since power is not needed to retain the conductivity state. Moreover, it minimizes the leakage of electrical current due to the steep slope at which the device changes conductivity with applied gate voltage. Both of these issues—high power consumption and leakage of electrical current—have constrained the performance of traditional transistors at the nanoscale.
“This is the first demonstration,” Wu adds. “Now it’s up to researchers to figure out how far it goes.”
No strain, no gain
One advantage of Wu’s platform is that it is configured much like a traditional transistor, making it easier to eventually adapt into current electronics. However, more work is needed before the platform reaches that stage. Currently, the device can operate only 70 to 100 times in the lab before device failure. While the endurance of other non-volatile memories, like flash, are much higher, they also operate much slower than the ultimate potential of the strain-based devices being developed in Wu’s lab.
“Do I think it’s a challenge that can be overcome? Absolutely,” says Wu, who will be working on the problem with Hesam Askari, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Rochester, also a coauthor on the paper. “It’s a materials engineering problem that we can solve as we move forward in our understanding how this concept works.”
They will also explore how much strain can be applied to various two-dimensional materials without causing them to break. Determining the ultimate limit of the concept will help guide researchers to other phase-change materials as the technology moves forward.
Learn more: Researchers ‘stretch’ the ability of 2D materials to change technology
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