Electrical characterization of few-layer MoS2 based field effect transistors with Ti/Au electrodes is performed in the vacuum chamber of a scanning electron microscope in order to study the effects of electron beam irradiation on the transport properties of the device. A negative threshold voltage shift and a carrier mobility enhancement is observed and explained in terms of positive charges trapped in the SiO2 gate oxide, during the irradiation. The transistor channel current is increased up to three order of magnitudes after the exposure to an irradiation dose of 100e -/nm 2 . Finally, a complete field emission characterization of the MoS2 flake, achieving emission stability for several hours and a minimum turn-on field of ≈ 20 V/µm with a field enhancement factor of about 500 at anode-cathode distance of ~1.5 µm, demonstrates the suitability of few-layer MoS2 as two-dimensional emitting surface for cold-cathode applications.
In recent years, magnetic-based technologies, like nanomagnet logic (NML), are gaining increasing interest as possible substitutes of CMOS transistors. The possibility to mix logic and memory in the same device, coupled with a potential low power consumption, opens up completely new ways of developing circuits. The major issue of this technology is the necessity to use an external magnetic field as clock signal to drive the information through the circuit. The power losses due to the magnetic field generation potentially wipe out any advantages of NML. To solve this problem, new clock mechanisms were developed, based on spin transfer torque current and on voltage-controlled multiferroic structures that use magnetoelastic properties of magnetic materials, i.e., exploiting the possibility of influencing magnetization dynamics by means of the elastic tensor. In particular, the latter shows an extremely low power consumption. In this paper, we propose an innovative voltage-controlled magnetoelastic clock system aware of the technological constraints risen by modern fabrication processes. We show how circuits can be fabricated taking into account technological limitations, and we evaluate the performance of the proposed system. Results show that the proposed solution promises remarkable improvements over other NML approaches, even though state-of-the-art ideal multiferroic logic has in theory better performance. Moreover, since the proposed approach is technology-friendly, it gives a substantial contribution toward the fabrication of a full magnetic circuit and represents an optimal tradeoff between performance and feasibility
We describe the first use of a novel photoresist-free X-ray nanopatterning technique to fabricate an electronic device. We have produced a proof-of-concept device consisting of a few Josephson junctions by irradiating microcrystals of the Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ (Bi-2212) superconducting oxide with a 17.6 keV synchrotron nanobeam. Fully functional devices have been obtained by locally turning the material into a nonsuperconducting state by means of hard X-ray exposure. Nano-XRD patterns reveal that the crystallinity is substantially preserved in the irradiated areas that there is no evidence of macroscopic crystal disruption. Indications are that O ions have been removed from the crystals, which could make this technique interesting also for other oxide materials. Direct-write X-ray nanopatterning represents a promising fabrication method exploiting material/material rather than vacuum/material interfaces, with the potential for nanometric resolution, improved mechanical stability, enhanced depth of patterning, and absence of chemical contamination with respect to traditional lithographic techniques.
Subsurface habitats on Earth host an extensive extant biosphere and likely provided one of Earth’s earliest microbial habitats. Although the site of life’s emergence continues to be debated, evidence of early life provides insights into its early evolution and metabolic affinity. Here, we present the discovery of exceptionally well-preserved, ~3.42-billion-year-old putative filamentous microfossils that inhabited a paleo-subseafloor hydrothermal vein system of the Barberton greenstone belt in South Africa. The filaments colonized the walls of conduits created by low-temperature hydrothermal fluid. Combined with their morphological and chemical characteristics as investigated over a range of scales, they can be considered the oldest methanogens and/or methanotrophs that thrived in an ultramafic volcanic substrate.
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