New materials for the computer of the future
Villigen, 08.12.2022 - Novel materials could revolutionise computer technology. Research conducted by scientists at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI using the Swiss Light Source SLS has reached an important milestone along this path.
Microchips are made from silicon and work on the physical principle of a semiconductor. Nothing has changed here since the first transistor was invented in 1947 in the Bell Labs in America. Ever since, researchers have repeatedly foretold the end of the silicon era - but have always been wrong. Silicon technology is very much alive, and continues to develop at a rapid pace. The IT giant IBM has just announced the first microprocessor whose transistor structures only measure two nanometres, equivalent to 20 adjacent atoms. So what's next? Even tinier structures? Presumably so - for this decade, at least.
At the same time, new ideas are taking shape in research laboratories regarding a revolutionary technology that could turn everything we think we know about microelectronics on its head. One of the shining lights in this research field is given by Milan Radovic team. Milan Radovic works at the Paul Scherrer Institute and his team just published an article in the journal Communication Physics presenting sensational findings from cutting-edge research into transparent oxides (TOs) that could open up huge prospects for this novel technology.
Innovative microchips
Radovic and his co-authors Muntaser Naamneh and Eduardo Guedes, together with the Bharat Jalan research group from the University of Minnesota, USA, do not work with silicon, but with transition metal oxides (TMOs). These exhibit exotic properties and multifunctional phenomena such as high-temperature superconductivity, colossal magnetoresistance, metal-insulator transition and much more besides. What may initially sound bewildering to a lay person promises enormous advances for the chip technology of the future.
In their latest publication, the researchers focus on barium tin oxide (BaSnO3), a material that combines optical transparency with high electrical conductivity.
Scientists have been trying for some time to elicit semiconductor-like properties from transition metals as well as special transparent oxides such as BaSnO3 and strontium stannate (SrSnO3). Compared with silicon, they offer ground-breaking advantages for optoelectronic elements: these transparent, conductive perovskite oxides, would make it possible to create switching elements with directly linked electrical and optical properties. It may then be conceivable to produce transistors that can be switched with light.
Knowledge of interfaces is critical
All microchips are made from a combination of different substances. To understand their function, it is important to know what happens in the thin adjacent layers, or interfaces, between these materials, because the physical properties of many materials are completely different on the surface compared with their interior. "Exotic phases" can occur at the interfaces of materials - a discovery made by three British physicists who were awarded the Nobel Prize in 2016. The article just published describes significant advances in the understanding of the surface-state electronic properties of BaSnO3.
The researchers used angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy at the beamline of the Swiss Light Source SLS to "discover the two-dimensional electronic state of BaSnO3 , which opens up new prospects for this class of materials," stresses Eduardo Guedes.
Optimal facilities for spectroscopy at the SLS
It is no coincidence that these findings were made at PSI: researchers on the PSI campus have access to a laboratory specialising in designing, producing, modifying and thoroughly investigating new materials. In addition, the SLS at PSI offers the very best facilities for screening substances at high spatial and temporal resolution. These sophisticated spectroscopy methods are a speciality of PSI, Switzerland's foremost research centre. There are only three locations worldwide that simultaneously meet all these requirements. The relevant know-how and advanced research infrastructure are also important prerequisites. "At PSI we explore and combine a knowledge with experimental facilities," says Radovic. Now the researchers want to find out which other materials exhibit similar properties and could be potential candidates for the optical microchips of the future.
But silicon is far from being an outdated technology, Milan Radovic stresses. It is in fact highly developed and efficient. "However, technology based on transition metal oxides is much more powerful and versatile - its time will come."
Text: Bernd Müller
About PSI
The Paul Scherrer Institute PSI develops, builds and operates large, complex research facilities and makes them available to the national and international research community. The institute's own key research priorities are in the fields of matter and materials, energy and environment and human health. PSI is committed to the training of future generations. Therefore about one quarter of our staff are post-docs, post-graduates or apprentices. Altogether PSI employs 2200 people, thus being the largest research institute in Switzerland. The annual budget amounts to approximately CHF 400 million. PSI is part of the ETH Domain, with the other members being the two Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology, ETH Zurich and EPFL Lausanne, as well as Eawag (Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology), Empa (Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology) and WSL (Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research).
Original publication
Surface state at BaSnO3 evidenced by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and ab initio calculations
Muntaser Naamneh, Eduardo B. Guedes, Abhinav Prakash, Henrique M. M. Cardoso,
Ming Shi, Nicholas C. Plumb, Walber H. Brito, Bharat Jalan, Milan Radovic
Communication Physics, 07.12.2022
DOI: /10.1038/s42005-022-01091-y
Address for enquiries
Dr. Mirjam van Daalen
Head of Communications
Paul Scherrer Institute
CH-5232 Villigen PSI
Phone: +41 56 310 56 74
mirjam.vandaalen@psi.ch
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