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Nonvolatile molecular memory elements based on ambipolar nanotube field effect transistors

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We have fabricated air-stable n-type, ambipolar carbon nanotube field effect transistors (CNFETs) and used them in nanoscale memory cells. n-Type transistors are achieved by annealing nanotubes in hydrogen gas and contacting them by cobalt electrodes. Scanning gate microscopy reveals that the bulk response of these devices is similar to gold-contacted p-CNFETs, confirming that Schottky barrier formation at the contact interface determines accessibility of electron and hole transport regimes. The transfer characteristics and Coulomb blockade (CB) spectroscopy in ambipolar devices show strongly enhanced gate coupling, most likely due to reduction of defect density at the silicon/silicon-dioxide interface during hydrogen anneal. The CB data in the on-state indicates that these CNFETs are nearly ballistic conductors at high electrostatic doping. Due to their nanoscale capacitance, CNFETs are extremely sensitive to the presence of individual charges around the channel. We demonstrate that this property can be harnessed to construct data storage elements that operate at the few-electron level.

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