What Are 2D Materials Good For?

By Eric Pop

Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA

Published on

Abstract

This talk will present my (admittedly biased) perspective of what two-dimensional (2D) materials could be good for. For example, they may be good for applications where their ultrathin nature and lack of dangling bonds give them distinct advantages, such as flexible electronics [1] or DNA-sorting nanopores [2]. They may not be good for applications where conventional materials work well, like in transistors thicker than a few nanometers. I will focus on the case of 2D materials for 3D heterogeneous integration of electronics, which presents significant advantages for energy-efficient computing [3]. In this context, 2D materials could be monolayer transistors with ultralow leakage [4] (taking advantage of larger band gaps than silicon), used as access devices for high-density data storage [5]. For example, recent results from our group have shown monolayer transistors with record performance [6,7], which cannot be achieved with sub-nanometer thin conventional semiconductors. I will also describe some less conventional applications, using 2D materials as highly efficient thermal insulators [8] and as thermal transistors [9]. These could enable control of heat in “thermal circuits” analogous with electrical circuits. Combined, these studies reveal fundamental limits and some unusual applications of 2D materials, which take advantage of their unique properties.

Bio

Eric Pop Prof. Eric Pop is the Pease-Ye Professor of Electrical Engineering (EE) and Materials Science & Engineering (by courtesy) at Stanford, where he leads the SystemX Heterogeneous Integration focus area. His research interests include nanoelectronics, data storage, and energy. Before Stanford, he spent several years on the faculty of UIUC, and in industry at Intel and IBM. He received his PhD in EE from Stanford (2005) and three degrees from MIT in EE and Physics. His honors include the Intel Outstanding Researcher Award, the PECASE from the White House, and Young Investigator Awards from the Navy, Air Force, DARPA, and NSF CAREER. He is an APS and IEEE Fellow, an Editor of 2D Materials, and a Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher. In his spare time he enjoys snowboarding and tennis, and in a past life he was a college radio DJ at KZSU 90.1. More information about the Pop Lab is available at http://poplab.stanford.edu and on Twitter @profericpop.

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References

  1. A. Daus et al., Nature Elec. 4, 495 (2021)
  2. J. Shim et al. Nanoscale 9, 14836 (2017)
  3. M. Aly et al., Computer 48, 24 (2015)
  4. C. Bailey et al., EMC (2019)
  5. A. Khan et al. Science 373, 1243 (2021)
  6. C. English et al., IEDM, Dec 2016
  7. C. McClellan et al. ACS Nano 15, 1587 (2021)
  8. S. Vaziri et al., Science Adv. 5, eaax1325 (2019)
  9. A. Sood et al. Nature Comm. 9, 4510 (2018)

Cite this work

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

  • Eric Pop (2024), "What Are 2D Materials Good For?," https://nanohub.org/resources/38830.

    BibTex | EndNote

Time

Location

129 Burton Morgan, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

Tags

What Are 2D Materials Good For?
  • What Are 2D Materials Good For? 1. What Are 2D Materials Good For… 0
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  • Outline 2. Outline 130.89756423089756
    00:00/00:00
  • Incomplete List of (Nano)Technologies 3. Incomplete List of (Nano)Techn… 157.8244911578245
    00:00/00:00
  • Some (Nano)Technologies Succeed: IGZO 4. Some (Nano)Technologies Succee… 310.643977310644
    00:00/00:00
  • Some (Nano)Technologies Do Not Succeed 5. Some (Nano)Technologies Do Not… 419.21921921921921
    00:00/00:00
  • Publications on Same (Nano)Technologies 6. Publications on Same (Nano)Tec… 641.50817484150821
    00:00/00:00
  • Outline 7. Outline 734.934934934935
    00:00/00:00
  • What Are 2-Dimensional (2D) Materials? 8. What Are 2-Dimensional (2D) Ma… 740.674007340674
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  • Over 1000 2D Materials… Which Will Succeed? 9. Over 1000 2D Materials… Whic… 808.17484150817484
    00:00/00:00
  • Huge Advances in Synthesis 10. Huge Advances in Synthesis 938.038038038038
    00:00/00:00
  • Moore's Law vs. Dennard's Law 11. Moore's Law vs. Dennard's Law 1024.4577911244578
    00:00/00:00
  • The Problem with Computing Today 12. The Problem with Computing Tod… 1092.726059392726
    00:00/00:00
  • 3D Integration Is Driving Our 2D Work 13. 3D Integration Is Driving Our … 1168.4017350684019
    00:00/00:00
  • Why 2D-TMD Transistors? 14. Why 2D-TMD Transistors? 1341.4414414414414
    00:00/00:00
  • Sub-100 nm Monolayer MoS2 Transistors 15. Sub-100 nm Monolayer MoS2 Tran… 1464.1975308641977
    00:00/00:00
  • Doping for High Current and Better Contacts 16. Doping for High Current and Be… 1590.8241574908243
    00:00/00:00
  • Monolayer MoS2 Current at VDS = 1 V 17. Monolayer MoS2 Current at VDS … 1758.4250917584252
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  • Monolayer MoS2 Current at VDS = VGS = 1 V 18. Monolayer MoS2 Current at VDS … 1901.4014014014015
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  • Monolayer MoS2 Current at VDS = VGS = 1 V 19. Monolayer MoS2 Current at VDS … 1970.5372038705373
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  • A Little Threshold Secret 20. A Little Threshold Secret 2093.3266599933268
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  • Good News #1: Quantum Capacitance 21. Good News #1: Quantum Capacita… 2221.8218218218217
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  • Good News #2: Strain-Enhanced Mobility 22. Good News #2: Strain-Enhanced … 2342.2422422422424
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  • Outline 23. Outline 2440.0734067400736
    00:00/00:00
  • Some Needs in 2D Materials & Devices… 24. Some Needs in 2D Materials & D… 2454.5545545545547
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  • More Key Takeaways (with My Biases…) 25. More Key Takeaways (with My Bi… 2609.442776109443
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  • What's Biggest Hurdle to Commercialization? 26. What's Biggest Hurdle to Comme… 2674.4744744744744
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  • Real Industry Buy-In? 27. Real Industry Buy-In? 2843.9105772439107
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  • What's Next…? 28. What's Next…? 2901.101101101101
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  • Acknowledgements 29. Acknowledgements 2972.8061394728061
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