This application is a 371 of PCT/IB2009/006400 filed Jun. 17, 2009, which claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/073,126 filed Jun. 17, 2008, which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates in general to atomistic electronics and in particular to a quantum cellular automata cell or qubit formed of single atom quantum dots.
While considerable progress has been made in understanding properties relevant to the development of nano-electronics, integration of atomic, molecular or nano-scale entities into operational circuitry has been difficult [1-12]. A quantum dot is typically comprised of a small cluster of atoms or molecules that exhibit quantized levels that are separated by energies intermediate to those in the bulk material and isolated single atoms or molecules. As quantum dots are often formed in place with spatial specificity within a larger circuit and specifically addressed, quantum dots represent the best demonstration to date of how digital circuitry can benefit from molecular electronics [13-17].
One goal that has eluded the field is the creation of multi-quantum dot ensembles to embody the Quantum Cellular Automata (QCA) scheme proposed by Lent and coworkers in 1993 [18]. This new paradigm for computing is based upon “cells” of tunnel coupled quantum dots, and electrostatic interaction between adjacent cells. Such assemblies are predicted to transmit binary information and perform computations at extremely low energy cost [18, 19]. The prototypical QCA cell is comprised of 4 quantum dots arranged as a square. Local electrode control provides a net cell charge of 2 electrons, of two degenerate, antipodal ground state electronic configurations. Local electrostatic electrodes break symmetry and cause the QCA unit to occupy one or the other of the diagonal 2 electron states. These states can be mapped as logic levels “0” and “1”. By creating a sequence of cells, inter-cell electrostatic coupling allows binary information to be conveyed from one point to another. Elaborations of the QCA scheme allow full implementation of logic for computation while still retaining the conventions of binary digital computing. Retention of a binary computing scheme in QCA affords the benefit of allowing existing software to be run on an energy efficient QCA device.
In its simplest implementation, 4 quantum dot electrostatic QCA requires no quiescent current. The QCA scheme is “edge driven”, that is, the logic inputs are also the power sources [20]. QCA cells formed with quantum dots having dimensions on the order of tens of nanometers [19, 21], and a coupled 3 cell quantum wire [12] have been achieved. QCA-like processes were also observed in serial triple quantum dot systems [23]. These efforts to form a QCA device have limited implications in routine computational schemes owing to the fact that temperatures in the milli-Kelvin range are required to prevent scrambling of states [20]. Local, unintended fixed, or occasionally changing charges on the quantum dots, or spurious defect charges on a quantum dot make local electrostatic tuning to achieve 2 electron filling both necessary and challenging [20]. Cryogenic conditions are also required for an approach based upon implanted dopants [24].
A qubit is a quantized information system controllably changed between two logic levels of “0” and “1” and is modeled as a two-dimensional complex vector space. Unlike digital logic element, qubits are preferably constructed to exhibit quantum entanglement that is a manifestation of perturbations and tunnel coupling between proximal elements. The qubit entanglement term affords an infinite set of superposition values intermediate between “0” and “1” levels that can render computation of many multi-variable dynamic events tractable. As with QCA devices, electronic state changing qubits have not been able to operate at ambient temperatures.
An atomistic quantum dot is based on a single atom or molecule and has a simplified set of orbital energy levels that are beneficial in terms of a reduced dimensionality and being less susceptible to unintended fixed, or sporadic charging relative to nanoparticle quantum dots. As a result of these and other expected attributes, molecular QCA cells have been envisioned with the goal of room temperature operation [25]. Difficulties associated with localization and controlled addressing of molecular quantum dots has prevented molecular QCA cells from being produced. Similar problems exist for electronic state transition based qubits.
Thus, there exists a need for an electronically addressable molecular or atomic quantum dot with operational capabilities at temperatures above milli-Kelvin. There further exists a need for QCA and qubit devices containing ordered arrangements of molecular or atomic quantum dots.
A quantum device is provided that includes controllably quantum mechanically coupled dangling bonds of a material. Each of the controllably quantum mechanically coupled dangling bonds has a separation from the remainder of the controllably quantum mechanically coupled dangling bonds of at least one atom of the material. At least one electrode is provided for selectively modifying an electronic state of the controllably quantum mechanically coupled dangling bonds.
Silicon surface atoms bonded to only three other silicon atoms are well suited for formation of the dangling bonds and are formed with a desired separation. Separations of between 3 and 40 Angstroms are well suited for quantum mechanical coupling interactions between the dangling bonds. By providing at least one additional electron within the controllably quantum mechanically coupled dangling bonds with the proviso that there exists at least one unoccupied dangling bond for each one additional electron present, the inventive device is operable at least to 293 degrees Kelvin and is largely immune to stray electrostatic perturbations.
Quantum cellular automata operable at temperatures of 293 Kelvin and above are formed by providing multiple such devices in communication through interconnects. A qubit operable at temperatures of 293 Kelvin and above has controllably quantum mechanically coupled dangling bonds extending from a surface of a material and at least two electrodes forming a quantum circuit for quantum computation that provides an infinite set of superpositioned values intermediate between digital logic levels of 0 and 1.
The present invention has utility in forming atomistic electronic devices such as quantum cellular automata or qubits. An atomistic quantum dot is controllably quantum mechanically coupled to embody the building block of a Quantum Cellular Automata device or a computational qubit. In a preferred embodiment a dangling bond (DB) operates as the atomistic quantum dot. Such cells exhibit a self-biasing effect, in that the electron occupation is set by cell geometry and the Fermi level. The binary state of the cell is controlled electrostatically. Unlike previous milli-Kelvin implementations, inventive devices operate above milli-Kelvin and even at room temperature (of 293 Kelvin) and are largely immune to stray electrostatic perturbations. An inventive dangling bond quantum device is controlled through proximal electrostatic perturbing dangling bonds or a electrode either suspended above, below or on the surface supporting the inventive device. An electrode illustratively includes a thin film contact, nanowire or an STM tip. Optionally, the electrode is used or biased to sense localization dynamics of a coupled dangling bond.
Control over qubit Hamiltonian in order to perform unitary transformations occurs according to the present invention through the formation/removal of a perturbing species such as a DB or an electrode to create a unitary transformation within a coupled two DB qubit. Likewise, qutrits and quadrits are readily formed according to the present invention through coupling of 3 or 4 DBs, respectively. Still higher order DB entities containing 5, 6, 7, 8 and even more coupled DBs are also rendered possible as room temperature quantum computational devices according to the present invention.
An inventive device is characterized by ultra low power consumption, operation above 1K to room temperature and above, ultra high device density and the demonstrated “self-biasing” character when provided with additional electron charge. Operation as an electronic state transition QCA or qubit device at room temperature is so provided.
Single and multiple electrode structures are known to the art in the context of semiconductor quantum dot QCA and molecular QCA systems [38, 39]. These electrode structures and arrangements are operative herein. An STM tip is used as an exemplary single electrode device. A two electrode system by way of example has a first logic input as a power source to perturb a DB and a second electrode monitoring the coupled DB electronic state.
An inventive device is formed by spatially controlled formation of dangling bonds (DBs) in a material. According to the present invention, silicon represents a preferred surface for the generation of dangling bonds. However, it is appreciated that other surfaces capable of supporting a localized charge that induces an electrostatic potential extending at least 1 Angstrom are operative herein. Other such materials illustratively include most semiconductor and compound semiconductor materials such as germanium, diamond, graphite, graphene, GaAs, InSb, transition metal chalcogenides, and thin insulator-on-conductor and thin insulator-on-semiconductor surfaces that can support charged atoms and/or quantum dots.
A single atom on the surface of a semiconducting material such as silicon is controllably charged within the range −1 to +1 electron charge. It is appreciated that similar control as to the charge of an atom of a different elemental identity than that of the host lattice is also achieved herein and includes at least one ionized impurity atom or molecule forming a dangling bond on a surface.
The atom to be charge controlled must have fewer bonding partners than is normal for that element with the non-partnered orbital forming the DB. For example a silicon atom, which would ordinarily share in four bonds, can be charged controllably if it is restricted to participating in only three bonds. That situation is achieved naturally at the surface of a silicon crystal where each surface atom has a three coordinate bonded. A single chargeable atom is created by bonding all but one surface silicon atom to a hydrogen atom, such that all surface silicon atoms share in three silicon-silicon bonds and one Si—H bond and forming multiple such DBs in spatially controlled proximity According to the present invention a single DB is readily formed on a silicon surface with spatial control. Spatial control allows for controlled construction of DBs and sensing leads therefor to develop a practical quantum computing architecture based on dangling bond electron configurations. This is in contrast to prior art doping of a silicon lattice with a phosphorus atom that lacks positional control over the location of the phosphorus atom.
Such an atom has associated with the DB a spatially localized electronic energy state that is within the band gap. The DB is higher in energy than the bulk semiconductor valence band edge, while lower in energy than the bottom of the conduction band edge. As the DB is energetically decoupled from the conduction band, the DB has an atomistic quality that makes QCA and qubit inventive devices operative beyond milli-Kelvin and up to and exceeding 293 Kelvin. This inventive attribute is in stark contrast to prior art QCA devices have required operation of milli-Kelvin. The particular charge level of a DB is a function of several parameters, principally those are the density of gap states, the doping concentration of the bulk crystal and the physical placement of and the relative electrostatic potential applied thereto.
With the distance dependent coupling of two or more atoms having DBs via an electron quantum mechanical interaction QCA and qubit devices are formed that operate at temperatures above 1 degree Kelvin and even above 293 degrees Kelvin. When a DB is utilized under conditions of ordinary negative charge thereon, Coulombic repulsion provides a self-biasing attribute to the DB and any device containing the DB, namely, that incomplete electronic occupation occurs and inter-atom quantum mechanical interaction and in particular tunneling is thereby enabled. Quantum mechanical coupling is evident at distances of approximately 4 to 20 Angstroms. The electrostatic setting of a bi-stable 4 silicon atom QCA cell into one logic state is demonstrated at room temperature. Similarly, the same DB ensembles are operative as pure or entangled qubits.
A −1 charged DB qubit is considered a preferred component in QCA owing to the robust, room temperature performance. It is appreciated that a neutral pair of DBs in proximity to allow for controllable quantum mechanical coupling form an artificial molecular entity resembling H2 with a preselected inter-DB separation that upon excitation functions as a qubit. By extension, more than two quantum mechanically coupled neutral DBs can mimic various electron configurations of cyclic carbon π electron systems.
d depicts the effect of distance between DBs, with closely spaced DBs taking on a “brighter” appearance as compared to more remote adjacent DBs. It is also seen that beyond some threshold, further reduced separation leads to further enhanced brightening. By controlled removal of single H atoms from a hydrogen passivated Si surface, DBs are formed in a desired pattern with a controlled distance between adjacent DBs. At least one atom lacking a DB separates adjacent DBs to limit the extent of Coulombic coupling to a degree that facilitates device formation. Based on the presence of at least one atom lacking a DB between adjacent DBs the extreme cases of two DBs on one silicon dimer [20] or on adjacent dimers in a row [21] are specifically excluded from the inventive devices. It is appreciated that different semiconductor surface faces are utilized to modify the angular and surface atom separation of DBs. In addition to the (100) surface, other surfaces operative herein illustratively include (110), (111), (010), (311), miscut surfaces and all reconstructions of these surfaces. It is appreciated that a DB is also readily formed on edge surfaces; at interfaces between disparate materials, especially those with lattice mismatch; within the bulk ordered and amorphous material. With a lateral separation of between 2 and 200 Angstroms between adjacent DBs a degree of quantum mechanical coupling is provided that is suitable for a QCA device or qubit entanglement. The exact distance is material-dependent and a function of material electrostatic potential.
c and 2d are STM images that demonstrate the elimination of the coupling effect through the elimination of one of a pair of DBs, by combining one DB (labeled DB6) with an H atom. A DB state once converted to an H-capped entity loses the capacity to hold an extra electron, the remaining DB becomes effectively isolated and negatively charged (DB5).
Two sufficiently close DBs are quantum mechanically coupled. As through-space covalent bonding is negligible beyond DB separations of about ˜4 Angstroms, the lattice mediates in the quantum mechanical coupling of DB wavefunction.
An inventive device based on electron confinement and electron quantum mechanical interaction in a system having DBs separated by between 3.4 and 20 Angstroms is also understood through computational modeling.
Density functional theory (DFT) modeling is performed on an inventive system using the B3LYP [32, 33] functional, as implemented in the Gaussian-03 [34] package, with 3-21G basis sets. The model used for the calculations consisted of pyramidal cluster of 396 silicon atoms with a 2×1 surface reconstruction and had three rows of seven dimers. The cluster contained two phosphorus dopant atoms. The two phosphorus atoms provide two excess electrons needed to charge two of the surface dangling bonds (DBs). One DB is stepped along one side of a dimer row toward a second DB of fixed position. A third DB, placed near one corner of the 2×1 face of the cluster, serves as an electron accepting site for the electron that is excluded from the closely-spaced DB pair when the Coulombic repulsion in the closely-spaced DB pair becomes large.
B3LYP calculations on a smaller cluster are used to provide a picture of the one-electron state of the charged DB. The physical extent on the DB state is clearly bounded by the row structure of the H—Si(100)-2×1 surface. In order to explore DB coupling, a harmonic oscillator potential is utilized [35]. The DBs are also modeled for atomic impurities in Si [37]. However, unlike a donor atom in a bulk dielectric material, which has a large effective radius, DBs are localized surfaces states. As such, the DB electrons are partially localized in the vacuum region above the surface with greater spatial breadth in the Si medium.
An effective two-dimensional harmonic oscillation is used to describe the confinement of an electron in a DB, with the electron effective mass equal to the free electron mass me. Based in the geometries of a silicon surface, the effective two-dimensional potential of an isolated DB must allow for electron escape from the DB orbital into the semiconductor bulk conduction band (CB). Therefore, outside the harmonic well region r<Rh the potential curve levels off to the bulk conduction band minimum. In this simple model, the isolated DB wavefunction has the form of a simple Gaussian-type function, and a ground state energy of E0=ℏω. The parameter ω is set such that the spatial extent of the DB wavefunction reflects that obtained from DFT modeling of about 3.8 Angstroms. The well depth is fitted to recover the correct values of the binding energy of an extra electron in a DB. Electrons quantum mechanically interact between neighboring DBs, provided that their separation is small enough, and that the Coulomb repulsion prevents full occupancy of the two DBs. The quantum mechanical interaction causes an energy splitting of the ground state energy of the system [36].
In
Two conditions allow electron quantum mechanical interactions between coupled DBs. When close enough, the barrier separating the DBs is sufficiently narrow to permit substantial quantum mechanical exchanges between the two DBs. But crucially, the exclusion of one electron from the paired DBs provides a partially empty state and therefore a destination for a tunneling electron. Without intending to be bound to a particular theory, the relatively bright appearance of coupled DBs is based upon expulsion of one of the 2 extra electrons causing upward band bending to be reduced, enabling relatively easy injection of electrons from the STM tip to the CB and a brighter appearance. Here, “extra” refers to the number of electrons greater than that required for neutrality. For example, 4 electrons at 2 DBs corresponds to a charge of −2 or 2 “extra” electrons. Though the charge at coupled DBs is reduced, resulting in an appearance more like that of neutral DBs (
The increased brightness of a DB pair with decreasing DB separation is a manifestation of the crossover between charging states −2 to −1. The injected STM current increases because of decreasing local band bending. One can control the average electron occupation of coupled DBs by DB separation distance. The DBs spaced by approximately 23 Angstroms to 1 electron as DBs become closer than 10 Angstroms, accounting for the increasingly bright appearance of DB pairs with decreasing separation, as seen in
The confinement potential used for an isolated DB allows for electron escape from the DB orbital into the bulk conduction band and outside the harmonic well region r<Rh the potential curve levels off to the bulk conduction band minimum (CBM), which is thus taken as the zero value for the confinement potential at r→∞.
Thus, as an illustrative model, a finite/truncated confinement potential is chosen as
where ω is the classical oscillation frequency of the electron in the well, V0 is the potential depth (measured from the CBM), and ftr is a truncation function, which ensures the finite range of the harmonic potential. We choose a simple form for
ftr(r)=[1−tan h((r−Rb)/w)]/2, (2)
where the parameters Rb and w determine the location and the width of the truncation region, respectively.
In this simplified model, the isolated DB wavefunction has the form of a simple Gaussian-type function, ψ0(r)=Aexp(−αr2), and a ground state energy of EG=ℏω (with respect to the potential bottom), where α=mω/2ℏ, and A is a normalization constant. The parameter ω is set such that the spatial extent of the simple Gaussian DB wavefunction reflects that obtained from density function theory (DFT) harmonic oscillator modeling of about 3.8 Angstroms. The binding energy of an electron in the harmonic oscillator (HO) well is then Eb=ECB−E0 where ECB is the conduction bond energy and E0 is the ground state energy. The well depth is fitted to recover the binding energy of the HO as calculated by the DFT methods detailed above.
A double well potential for describing a quantum mechanically-coupled DB pair was simply built by combining the single well potentials of the two DBs according to
which has the effect of V12(r) being approximately equal to either VDB1 or VDB2, depending on which DB is closer to the point r.
For a double well system, the quantum mechanical tunneling coefficient calculated within the WKB approximation [36] is
where ±a are the classical turning points of the potential barrier. Accordingly, the tunneling splitting interaction is calculated as
A device composed of n DBs on the H—Si (100) surface where n is an integer between 2 and ∞. In order to calculate the charging probabilities of this device with a number of i electrons, the effects of the DB system being in contact with a reservoir (the bulk crystal), with a temperature T and a chemical potential EF (i.e. the grand canonical ensemble) are determined. The probability occurrence of a charging state with a given number of extra electrons in the DB cell is calculated.
In order for a DB device to have an integer number of extra electrons, and a well-defined polarization, an inventive device operates in a regime where the quantum mechanical tunneling energies are much smaller than the Coulomb energies, t<<Vel [8] as required in a QCA device. Neglecting the quantum mechanical tunneling contributions to the charging energies, at room temperature, due to statistical fluctuations, all charging states have a finite probability of occurrence. Assuming classical statistics, each charging state is characterized by a statistical weight, equal to a Boltzmann factor for each charging state. Thus, for one electron charging, the weight is
f1e=g1eexp[−(E1etot−EF)/kT] (6)
where E1etot is the total energy of the n-DB cell with one extra electron, k is the Boltzmann constant, T is the temperature, and gie is the degeneracy of the charging state i. Assuming there are no external perturbations, E1etot=−Eb, where all energies are measured from the CB level. Similarly, the two electron charging weight is
f1e=g2eexp[−(E2etot−2EF)/kT], (7)
with E2etot=−2Eb+V2etot and V2etot being the total electrostatic energy of the cell. The latter interaction is calculated simply as a point-charge interaction
where e is the elementary charge, d is the DB separation, and ∈srf is the effective dielectric constant of the surface.
Similarly, the weight of any charging state i is
fie=gieexp└−(Eietot−iEp)/kT┘. (9)
In calculating the total charging energies of the device, the quantum mechanical tunneling energies are neglected, and only considered the lowest energy configuration for a given charging state. For example, diagonal occupancy only for a doubly charged 4-DB device is considered, and no allowed configuration with the electrons on adjacent DBs.
The partition function of the n-DB cell is then
Z=f1e+f2e+ . . . +fne, (10)
and the probabilities of each charging state i are then pie=fie/Z, for i=1, n. For instance, in order to have a “definitely” doubly occupied 4-DB cell, we need to fulfill the condition p1e,p3e,p4e<<p2e≅1.
In the lower inset of
Accounting for the charging probability of a DB, an estimate of the quantum mechanical tunnelinging rates between two quantum mechanically-coupled DBs is provided as the product of the frequency of attempts ω/2π, the tunneling coefficient D, and the probability of having an unoccupied second DB when the first DB is occupied, equal to p1e=1−p2e.
where p1e is the probability of having 1 extra electrons in a 2-DB cell. The black curve in the inset graph in
The ratio of quantum mechanical tunneling rate is controlled by a variety of device factors. These factors illustratively include DB separation, which increases quantum mechanical tunneling rate as DB separation decreases, barrier height, and charging state probabilities. These latter factors are modified by varying the doping level, semiconductor material identity and/or using electrodes to vary the local electrostatic potential.
a shows 3 coupled DBs. As a result of different time-averaged electron occupation, the brightness varies among the DBs. DB2, for example, has the most pronounced appearance and is therefore least negative. In
The most widely separated DBs in the group of four DBs (labeled DB2 and DB4) are darkest in appearance. Upon accounting for upward band bending and local STM image darkening with localized negative charge [22], it is apparent that the extra electrons in this structure were predominantly located at the most distant DBs—consistent with the expectation that the greatest charge separation corresponds to the lowest energy configuration.
As at least one empty state is required to allow quantum mechanical interactions between DBs, which in turn leads to the relatively bright appearance of coupled DBs, it is evident that at least one electron has been excluded, and, as a group-encircling dark halo is present, it is evident that some extra electrons remain localized at this grouping. The exact charging state of a DB cell depends on the Fermi level of the sample, EF (which in turn depends on temperature and dopant concentration), and for a fixed EF, on the distances between the DBs in the device. Computation allows this determination to be refined; it is found that Coulombic repulsion is too great for 3 electrons to be bound on the structure shown in
In order to describe the operational process of a 4 coupled DB grouping as a QCA with respect to selective electronic symmetry degeneration breaking, reference is now made to the simpler 2 coupled DB grouping to convey an understanding of the effect of a point electrostatic perturbation.
a shows a pair of coupled DBs. DB2 is marginally brighter in appearance than DB1. In
This electrostatic coupling effect is exemplary of the type of gating required in a QCA device [20, 21]. DB3 by breaking of symmetry leading to a dominance of one occupation over another selectively operates to break dependency in the DB1-DB2 coupled pair. It is notable that the coupled DBs reveal a “self-biasing” effect by spontaneously having 1, and not zero or two electrons in the 2 dot entity, thereby removing the need for a “filling” electrode to tune occupation.
This single electronic spontaneous fill of a coupled DB pair extends to larger groupings of coupled DB pairs. Such coupled DB pairs can be formed in a variety of arrangements illustratively including linear, stepped linear patterns, rectangular, rectilinear, parallelogram, and other polygonal shapes to form cellular neural networks.
Computation as to the grouping of
It is appreciated that groupings of cells of 4 coupled DBs can be used to construct elements of a QCA computer. Different grouping of DB assemblies allows for data storage. Such architectures may be achieved through combination of one or more QCAs and/or qubits. As an inventive device exhibits quantum entanglement associated with an additional electron charge quantum mechanically coupling between DBs and as such the logic inputs also serve as the power source. It is appreciated that unlike conventional digital microelectronic devices, an inventive device is even operable with a single electrode. The management of the transfer of state information between nodes in QCA, and integration of QCA into VLSI architecture are known to the art [40].
Considerable latitude exists for control over electron occupation and device operation. Slightly more widely spaced configurations will reduce Coulombic repulsion to allow, and lead automatically to, a greater net charge. Similarly, closer spaced structures will naturally exhibit reduced charge levels. This “self biasing” to achieve a −2 cell charge as required by the QCA framework is most desirable as it removes the need for multiple and single cell-specific “filling” electrodes. Fixed charges beyond approximately 20 Angstroms from a grouping are calculated to be insignificant perturbations on the logic state and filling level of a Si DB-based QCA cell, in contrast to the acute sensitivity of some quantum dots to relatively distant unintended charges [41]. The robustness of the inventive atomistic quantum dots results from the large energy level spacing of bound states compared to nanocrystal quantum dots and as a result DBs form devices operative at room temperature rather than requiring cryogenic conditions of prior art devices.
Patent documents and publications mentioned in the specification are indicative of the levels of those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. These documents and publications are incorporated herein by reference to the same extent as if each individual document or publication was specifically and individually incorporated herein by reference.
The foregoing description is illustrative of particular embodiments of the invention, but is not meant to be a limitation upon the practice thereof. The following claims, including all equivalents thereof, are intended to define the scope of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2009/006400 | 6/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/13/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/153669 | 12/23/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5051786 | Nicollian et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5202290 | Moskovits | Apr 1993 | A |
5346851 | Randall | Sep 1994 | A |
5447873 | Randall | Sep 1995 | A |
5530263 | Divincenzo | Jun 1996 | A |
5614435 | Petroff | Mar 1997 | A |
5643828 | Ugajin | Jul 1997 | A |
5646418 | Frazier | Jul 1997 | A |
5646420 | Yamashita | Jul 1997 | A |
5663571 | Ugajin | Sep 1997 | A |
5671437 | Taira | Sep 1997 | A |
5679961 | Higurashi | Oct 1997 | A |
5783840 | Randall | Jul 1998 | A |
5834378 | Kurtz et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
5889288 | Futatsugi | Mar 1999 | A |
5923046 | Tezuka | Jul 1999 | A |
5965212 | Dobson | Oct 1999 | A |
6033972 | Ro | Mar 2000 | A |
6118686 | Taira | Sep 2000 | A |
6268273 | Kim | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6323504 | Shin | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6333516 | Katoh | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6596555 | Bensahel | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6597010 | Eriksson | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6597036 | Lee | Jul 2003 | B1 |
6635898 | Williams | Oct 2003 | B2 |
6661022 | Morie | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6670670 | Chae | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6756292 | Lee | Jun 2004 | B2 |
6770916 | Ohshima | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6794265 | Lee | Sep 2004 | B2 |
6946346 | Chae | Sep 2005 | B2 |
6949793 | Choi | Sep 2005 | B2 |
6988058 | Sherwin | Jan 2006 | B1 |
7006267 | Franson | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7015497 | Berger | Mar 2006 | B1 |
7018852 | Wu | Mar 2006 | B2 |
7022628 | Kim | Apr 2006 | B2 |
7105874 | Chae | Sep 2006 | B2 |
7144458 | Zehnder | Dec 2006 | B2 |
7208753 | Yang | Apr 2007 | B2 |
7219018 | Vitaliano | May 2007 | B2 |
7250319 | Liu | Jul 2007 | B2 |
7259068 | Choi | Aug 2007 | B2 |
7303937 | Chen | Dec 2007 | B2 |
7307030 | Song | Dec 2007 | B2 |
7323725 | Yoshii | Jan 2008 | B2 |
7338858 | Koh | Mar 2008 | B2 |
7351997 | Ofek | Apr 2008 | B2 |
7358525 | Lee | Apr 2008 | B2 |
7364923 | Lidar | Apr 2008 | B2 |
7381625 | Xi | Jun 2008 | B2 |
7382017 | Duan | Jun 2008 | B2 |
7402832 | Lee | Jul 2008 | B2 |
7405126 | Choi | Jul 2008 | B2 |
7419849 | Kumagai | Sep 2008 | B2 |
7428562 | Beausoleil | Sep 2008 | B2 |
20030066998 | Lee | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20040215585 | Benjamin | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20050201149 | Duan | Sep 2005 | A1 |
20050202615 | Duan | Sep 2005 | A1 |
20060091375 | Freedman | May 2006 | A1 |
20060134931 | Lin | Jun 2006 | A1 |
20060151775 | Hollenberg et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
20060179029 | Vala | Aug 2006 | A1 |
20060243962 | Tang | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20060260016 | Greentree | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20070194297 | McCarthy | Aug 2007 | A1 |
20070196937 | Itoh | Aug 2007 | A1 |
20070215862 | Beausoleil | Sep 2007 | A1 |
20070221986 | Kang | Sep 2007 | A1 |
20070247904 | Duan | Oct 2007 | A1 |
20070249064 | De La Fuente | Oct 2007 | A1 |
20070295266 | Lee et al. | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20080012003 | Song | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080026532 | Duan | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080031296 | Spillane | Feb 2008 | A1 |
20080067498 | Song | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20080185576 | Hollenberg | Aug 2008 | A1 |
20080191718 | Wolkow et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
20080237576 | Hawrylak | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20100140586 | Char et al. | Jun 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
03023817 | Mar 2003 | WO |
2005124674 | Dec 2005 | WO |
2006133117 | Dec 2006 | WO |
2008038970 | Apr 2008 | WO |
2008044828 | Apr 2008 | WO |
2008093087 | Aug 2008 | WO |
2008118399 | Oct 2008 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Haider et al., “Controlled Coupling and Occupation of Silicon Atomic Quantum Dots at Room Temperature”, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102 046805, Jan. 27, 2009, American Physical Society, USA. |
Pitters et al., “Detailed Studies of Molecular Conductance Using Atomic Resolution Scanning Tunneling Microscopy”, Nano Letters, vol. 6 No. 3, Feb. 10, 2006, pp. 390-397, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Nacci et al., Conformational switching of single 1,5-cyclooctadiene molecules on Si(001) induced by inelastic electron tunneling, Physical Review B 77, 121405(R), Mar. 27, 2008, pp. 121405-1 thru 121405-4, American Physical Society, USA. |
Gaudioso et al., “Vibrationally Mediated Negative Differential Resistance in a Single Molecule,” Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 85 No. 9, Aug. 28, 2000, pp. 1918-1921, American Physical Society, USA. |
Rakshit et al., “Silicon-based Molecular Electronics”, Nano Letters, vol. 4 No. 10, Oct. 2004, pp. 1803-1807, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Quek et al., “Negative Differential Resistance in Transport through Organic Molecules on Silicon”, Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 98, 066807, Issue 6, Feb. 8, 2007, pp. 066807-1 thru 066807-4, American Physical Society, USA. |
Bevan et al., “First-Principles Nonequilibrium Analysis of STM-Induced Molecular Negative-Differential Resistance on Si (100)”, Phys. Rev. B 78, 035303, Jul. 1, 2008, American Physical Society, USA. |
Aviram et al., “Molecular Rectifiers,” Chem. Phys. Lett. vol. 29 Issue 2, Nov. 15, 1974, pp. 277-283. |
Reed et al., “Conductance of a molecular junction,” Science, vol. 278 No. 5336, Oct. 10, 1997, pp. 252-254 (1997). |
Cui et al., “Reproducible measurement of single-molecule conductivity,” Science, vol. 294 No. 5542, Oct. 19, 2001, pp. 571-574. |
Selzer et al., “Effect of local environment on molecular conduction: Isolated molecule versus self-assembled monolayer,” Nano Lett., vol. 5 No. 1, Dec. 2, 2004, pp. 61-65, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Wold et al., “Distance dependence of electron tunneling through self-assembled monolayers measured by conducting probe atomic force microscopy: Unsaturated versus saturated molecular junctions,” J. Phys. Chem. B, vol. 106 No. 11, Mar. 21, 2002, pp. 2813-2816, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Wang et al., “Inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy of an alkanedithiol self-assembled monolayer,” Nano Lett., vol. 4 No. 4, Mar. 10, 2004, pp. 643-646, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Kaun et al., “Momentum filtering effect in molecular wires,” Phys. Rev. B 70, 195309, Nov. 9, 2004, American Physical Society, USA. |
Nazin et al., “Visualization and spectroscopy of a metal-molecule-metal bridge,” Science, vol. 302, Oct. 3, 2003, pp. 77-81. |
Yang et al., “Role of heating and current-induced forces in the stability of atomic wires,” Phys. Rev. B 71, 041402(R) Jan. 13, 2005, American Physical Society, USA. |
Damle et al., “Current—voltage characteristics of molecular conductors: two versus three terminal,” IEEE Trans. Nanotech., vol. 1 No. 3, Sep. 2002, pp. 145-153 (2002). |
Emberly et al., “The smallest molecular switch,” Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 91 No. 18, 188301, Oct. 27, 2003, American Physical Society, USA. |
Landman et al., “Small is different: energetic, structural, thermal, and mechanical properties of passivated nanocluster assemblies,” Faraday Discuss. 125, Oct. 23, 2003, pp. 1-22, Royal Society of Chemistry, UK & USA. |
De Franceschi et al., “Electron Cotunneling in a Semiconductor Quantum Dot,” Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 86 No. 5, Jan. 29, 2001, pp. 878-881, American Physical Society, USA. |
Holleitner et al., “Probing and Controlling the Bonds of an Artificial Molecule. Science,” vol. 297 No. 5578, Jul. 5, 2002 pp. 70-72, American Association for the Advancement of Science, USA. |
Elzerman et al., “Few-electron quantum dot circuit with integrated charge read out,” Phys. Rev. B. 67, 161308(R), Apr. 30, 2003, American Physical Society, USA. |
Pioro-Ladriere et al., “Charge sensing of an artificial H2 + molecule in lateral quantum dots,” Phys. Rev. B. 72, 125307, Sep. 7, 2005, American Physical Society, USA. |
Gaudreau et al., “Stability Diagram of a Few-Electron Triple Dot,” Phys. Rev. Lett., 97, 036807, Jul. 21, 2006, American Physical Society, USA. |
Lent et al., “Quantum cellular automata,” Nanotechnology 4, pp. 49-57, 1993, IPO Publishing Ltd, UK. |
Lent, “Perspectives: Molecular Electronics: Bypassing the transistor paradigm,” Science, vol. 288 No. 5471, pp. 1597-1599, Jun. 2, 2000, American Association for the Advancement of Science, USA. |
Lent et al., “A device architecture for computing with quantum dots,” Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 85 No. 4, pp. 541-557, Apr. 1997, IEEE, USA. |
Orlov et al., “Realization of a functional cell for quantum-dot cellular automata,” Science, vol. 277 No. 5328, pp. 928-930, Aug. 15, 1997. |
Yadavalli et al., “Fanout gate in quantum-dot cellular automata,” Nanotechnology, 18, 375401, Aug. 22, 2007, IPO Publishing Ltd, UK. |
Schroer et al., “Electrostatically defined serial triple quantum dot charged with few electrons,” Phys. Rev. B 76, 075306, Aug. 3, 2007, American Physical Society, USA. |
Cole et al., “Quantum-dot cellular automata using buried dopants,” Phys. Rev. B 71, 115302, Mar. 7, 2005, American Physical Society, USA. |
Lent et al., “Molecular quantum-dot cellular automata,” J. Am. Chem. Soc., vol. 125, pp. 1056-1063, Jan. 4, 2003, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Piva et al., “Field regulation of single-molecule conductivity by a charged surface atom,” Nature, vol. 435, pp. 658-661, Jun. 2, 2005, Nature Publishing Group. |
Ebert, “Nano-scale properties of defects in compound semiconductor surfaces,” Surface Science Reports, vol. 33, Issues 4-8, pp. 121-303, 1999, Elsevier, USA. |
Lyding et al., “Nanoscale patterning and oxidation of H-passivated Si(100)-2×1 surfaces with an ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscope,” Appl. Phys. Lett., vol. 64, Issue 15, pp. 2010-2012, Apr. 1994. |
Ebert, “Atomic structure of point defects in compound semiconductor surfaces,” Curr. Opin. in Solid State and Materials Science, vol. 5, pp. 211-250, 2001, Elsevier Science Ltd. |
Boland, “Scanning tunneling microscopy study of the adsorption and recombinative desorption of hydrogen from the Si(100)-2×1 surface,” Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A, vol. 10, Issue 4, pp. 2458-2464, 1992. |
Hitosugi et al., “Jahn-Teller distortion in dangling-bond linear chains fabricated on a hydrogen-terminated Si(100)-2×1 surface,” Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 82 No. 20, pp. 4034-4037, May 17, 1999, American Physical Society, USA. |
Becke, “Density-functional thermochemistry. III. The role of exact exchange,” J. Chem. Phys., vol. 98(7), 5648-5652, Apr. 1, 1993, American Institute of Physics, USA. |
Lee et al., “Development of the Colle-Salvetti correlation energy formula into a functional of the electron density,” Phys. Rev. B vol. 37 No. 2, pp. 785-789, Jan. 15, 1988, American Physical Society, USA. |
Frisch et al., “Gaussian 03 Revision C.02,” (Gaussian, Inc., Wallingford, Connecticut, 2004). |
Burkard et al., “Coupled quantum dots as quantum gates,” Phys. Rev. B, vol. 59 No. 3, pp. 2070-2078, Jan. 15, 1999, American Physical Society, USA. |
Weiner, “Transmission function vs energy splitting in tunneling calculations,” J. Chem. Phys., vol. 69(11), pp. 4743-4749, Dec. 1, 1978, American Institute of Physics, USA. |
Resca, et al., “Intervalley effective-mass theory: pseudopotential formulation,” Phys. Rev. B, vol. 32 No. 2, pp. 1068-1076, Jul. 15, 1985, American Physical Society, USA. |
Orlov et al., “Experimental demonstration of a binary wire for quantum-dot cellular automata,” Appl. Phys. Lett, vol. 74 No. 19, pp. 2875-2877, May 10, 1999, American Institute of Physics, USA. |
Qi et al., “Molecular quantum cellular automata cells. Electric field driven switching of a silicon surface bound array of vertically oriented two-dot molecular quantum cellular automata,” J. Am. Chem. Soc., vol. 125 No. 49, pp. 15250-15259 Nov. 14, 2003, American Chemical Society, USA. |
Antonelli et al., “Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata (QCA) circuit partitioning: problem modeling and solutions,” Proceedings of the 41st annual conference on Design automation, 23.3, pp. 363-368, Jun. 7-11, 2004, San Diego, CA, USA. |
Tucker et al., “Can single-electron integrated circuits and quantum computers be fabricated in silicon?,” Int. J. Circuit Theory and Applications, vol. 28 Issue 6, pp. 553-562, Nov./Dec. 2000, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, USA. |
Scherpereel, “Atomic Quantum Dots,” Foresight Science & Technology Go/No Go Assessment Report, National Research Council of Canada, Project No. VST0308GN, Aug. 1, 2008. |
Choo et al., Quantum Dot as a Resource for Teleportation and State Swapping, Physical Review B 75, 205321, May 14, 2007, pp. 205321-1 thru 205321-9, American Physical Society, USA. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110084251 A1 | Apr 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61073126 | Jun 2008 | US |