Steep transistors: The
ability to scale a transistor’s supply voltage is determined by the minimum
voltage required to switch the device between an on- and an off-state. The
sub-threshold slope (SS) is the measure used to indicate this property. For
instance, a smaller SS means the transistor can be turned on using a smaller
supply voltage while meeting the same off current. For MOSFETs, the SS has to
be greater than ln(10) × kT/q where k is the Boltzmann constant, T is the
absolute temperature, and q is the electron charge. This fundamental constraint
arises from the thermionic nature of the MOSFET conduction mechanism and leads
to a fundamental power/performance trade off, which could be overcome if SS values
significantly lower than the theoretical 60-mV/decade limit could be achieved.
Many device types have been proposed that could produce steep SS values,
including tunneling field-effect transistors (TFETs), ferroelectric-gate FETs,
and impact ionization MOSFETs. Several recent papers have reported experimental
observation of SS values in TFETs as low as 40 mV/decade at room temperature.
These so-called “steep” devices’ main limitations are their low mobility,
asymmetric drive current, bias dependent SS, and larger statistical variations
in comparison to traditional MOSFETs.
TFET FET
Spin devices: Spintronics is a technology that utilizes nano magnets’ spin
direction as the state variable. Spintronics has unique properties over CMOS,
including nonvolatility, lower device count, and the potential for non-Boolean
computing architectures. Spintronics devices’ nonvolatility enables instant
processor wake-up and power-down that could dramatically reduce the static
power consumption. Furthermore, it can enable novel processor-in-memory or
logic-in-memory architectures that are not possible with silicon technology.
Although in its infancy, research in spintronics has been gaining momentum over
the past decade, as these devices could potentially overcome the power
bottleneck of CMOS scaling by offering a completely new computing paradigm. In
recent years, progress has been made toward demonstration of various post-CMOS
spintronic devices including all-spin logic, spin wave devices, domain wall
magnets for logic applications, and spin transfer torque magnetoresistive RAM
(STT-MRAM) and spin-Hall torque (SHT) MRAM for memory applications. However,
for spintronics technology to become a viable post-CMOS device platform,
researchers must find ways to eliminate the transistors required to drive the
clock and power supply signals. Otherwise, the performance will always be
limited by CMOS technology. Other remaining challenges for spintronics devices
include their relatively high active power, short interconnect distance, and
complex fabrication process.

STT-MRAM SHT-MRAM
Flexible electronics: Distributed large area (cm2-to-m2) electronic systems based on
flexible thin-film-transistor
(TFT) technology are drawing much attention due to unique
properties such as mechanical conformability, low temperature processability,
large area coverage, and low fabrication costs. Various forms of flexible TFTs
can either enable applications that were not achievable using traditional
silicon based technology, or surpass them in terms of cost per area. Flexible
electronics cannot match the performance of silicon-based ICs due to the low
carrier mobility. Instead, this technology is meant to complement them by
enabling distributed sensor systems over a large area with moderate performance
(less than 1 MHz). Development of inkjet or roll-to-roll printing techniques
for flexible TFTs is underway for low-cost manufacturing, making product-level
implementations feasible. Despite these encouraging new developments, the low
mobility and high sensitivity to processing parameters present major
fabrication challenges for realizing flexible electronic systems.
CMOS scaling is coming to an end, but no single technology has
emerged as a clear successor to silicon. The urgent need for post-CMOS
alternatives will continue to drive high-risk, high-payoff research on novel
device technologies. Replicating silicon’s success might sound like a pipe
dream. But with the world’s best and brightest minds at work, we have reasons
to be optimistic.
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