Seunguk Song, a postdoctoral fellow in ESE, holds an industrial-scale wafer. Photo: University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science.
Seunguk Song, a postdoctoral fellow in ESE, holds an industrial-scale wafer. Photo: University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science.

The semiconductor industry today is working on meeting three main challenges: increasing computing power, decreasing chip sizes and managing power in densely packed circuits. To do this, the industry must look beyond silicon to produce devices appropriate for the growing role of computing.

While unlikely to abandon the workhorse material anytime in the near or distant future, the technology sector will require creative enhancements in chip materials and architectures to produce devices appropriate for the growing role of computing.

One of the biggest shortcomings of silicon is that it can only be made so thin because its material properties are fundamentally limited to three dimensions. For this reason, two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors – so thin as to have almost no height – have become objects of interest to scientists, engineers and microelectronics manufacturers.

Thinner chip components would provide greater control and precision over the flow of electricity in a device, while lowering the amount of energy required to power it. A 2D semiconductor would also contribute to keeping the volume of a chip to a minimum, lying in a thin film atop a supporting silicon substrate.

But until recently, attempts to create such a 2D material have been unsuccessful.

Certain 2D semiconductors have performed well on their own but need to be deposited at such high temperatures that they destroy the underlying silicon chip. Others can be deposited at silicon-compatible temperatures, but their electronic properties – energy usage, speed, precision – are lacking. Some fit the bill for temperature and performance but can’t be grown to the requisite purity at industry-standard sizes.

Now, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science have managed to grow a high-performing 2D semiconductor on an industrial-scale wafer. In addition, this semiconductor material, indium selenide (InSe), can be deposited at temperatures low enough to integrate with a silicon chip.

The study was led by Deep Jariwala, associate professor in the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering (ESE), and Seunguk Song, a postdoctoral fellow in ESE. They report their results in a paper in Matter.

“Semiconductor manufacturing is an industrial-scale manufacturing process,” says Jariwala. “You aren’t going to have a viable material unless you can produce it on industrial-scale wafers. The more chips you can make in a batch, the lower the price. But the material must also be pure to ensure performance. This is why silicon is so prevalent – you can make it in large quantities without sacrificing purity.”

InSe has long shown promise as a 2D material for advanced computing chips because it carries electrical charge exceptionally well. But producing large enough films of InSe has proven tricky. This is because indium and selenium tend to combine in a few different molecular proportions, taking on chemical structures with varying ratios of each element and thus compromising its purity.

The team’s success hinged on Song’s application of a growth technique that could overcome the quirks of InSe’s atomic structure.

“For the purposes of an advanced computing technology, the chemical structure of 2D InSe needs to be exactly 50:50 between the two elements,” explains Song. “The resulting material needs a uniform chemical structure over a large area to work.”

The team achieved this groundbreaking purity using a growth technique called vertical metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). Previous research had attempted to introduce the indium and selenium in equal quantities and at the same time. Song demonstrated, however, that this method was the source of the undesirable chemical structures in the material, producing molecules with varying ratios of each element. MOCVD, by contrast, works by sending the indium in a continuous stream while introducing the selenium in pulses.

“By pulsing, you give the indium and selenium time to combine,” says Song. “In the moments between pulses, you deprive the environment of selenium, which prevents the ratio from getting too high. The benefit of the pulse is the pause. That’s how we get a uniform 50:50 ratio across our entire full-size wafer.”

In addition to chemical purity, the team was also able to control and align the direction of crystal growth, enhancing the quality of their semiconductor even further by providing a seamless environment for electron transport.

“The two most important material qualities in a semiconductor are chemical purity and crystalline order. The most important industrial quality is scalability. This material checks every box,” says Jariwala.

This story is adapted from material from the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.