Seminar by Dr. Adina Scott, Thurs. 11/6 at 10:30 am (BNC 1001)
Hi all, NSAC is hosting a seminar by Adina Scott this Thursday, 11/6 at 10:30 am in Birck 1001. Until she defended her thesis in September, Adina was a graduate student at Birck, working in Prof. Janes group. Please come to her seminar Thursday morning on metal-molecule-silicon devices (MMS devices). Adina will be speaking about the fabrication, characterization, and applications of MMS devices. As a bonus, NSAC is providing cookies and tea. Thank you, NSAC Nanotechnology Student Advisory Council Metal-Molecule-Silicon Heterostructures Thursday, November 6, 2008 Birck Nanotechnology Building, Room 1001 10:30 A.M. Dr. Adina Scott Electrical Engineering, Purdue University Recently there has been significant interest in incorporating molecular elements into electronic devices for electronics, memory, and chemical/biological sensing applications. To date much of the work on this topic has utilized metal electrodes however using silicon (Si) presents physical and technological advantages. Molecules can be covalently bound to Si surfaces. Device properties can be tailored both by changing the surface chemistry and by doping the Si. Moreover, Si is technologically relevant for electronics applications. This study focuses on the development, characterization, and modeling of metal/molecule/Si (MMS) devices. Si surfaces have been functionalized with various organic species and the resulting molecular layers have been characterized using a variety of surface-analysis techniques. The structural and chemical properties of metallized molecular layers have been characterized using in-situ spectroscopic measurements. MMS devices with various molecular layers, Si doping types, and doping densities have been fabricated and electrically characterized using capacitance-voltage and temperature-dependent current-voltage measurements. A model has been developed in which MMS devices are described by a four-layer structure consisting of the metal, the molecular layer, the Si surface, and the Si bulk. Electronic transport is modulated by the molecular layer, which acts as a tunnel barrier with a transmission coefficient that depends on the molecular- electronic structure, and the Si surface, which can be accumulated or depleted depending on the device electrostatics. In the MMS devices developed and analyzed in the study, electronic transport is governed by the interplay between the molecular-electronic properties and Si bandstructure, enabling novel hybrid organic/semiconductor functionality. Biography: Adina Scott has been working with Prof. David Janes since 2003. In September 2008, she defended her PhD thesis, “Metal/Molecule/Silicon Devices: Realizing Hybrid Semiconductor/Organic Functionality.” She has received numerous awards including a NSF Graduate Research Fellowship and a Purdue Doctoral Fellowship. She received her BSE in Electrical Engineering and BA in Music from Case Western Reserve University in 2003.
participants (1)
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Laura Biedermann