Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997
Protected surface states arising from non-trivial bandstructure topology in semimetals can potentially enable advanced device functionalities in compute, memory, interconnect, sensing, and communication. This necessitates a fundamental understanding of surface-state transport in nanoscale topological semimetals. Here, we investigate quantum transport in a prototypical topological semimetal NbAs to evaluate the potential of this class of materials for beyond-Cu interconnects in highly-scaled integrated circuits. Using density functional theory (DFT) coupled with non-equilibrium Green’s function (NEGF) calculations, we show that the resistance-area RA product in NbAs films decreases with decreasing thickness at the nanometer scale, in contrast to a nearly constant RA product in ideal Cu films. This anomalous scaling originates from the disproportionately large number of surface conduction states which dominate the ballistic conductance by up to 70% in NbAs thin films. We also show that this favorable RA scaling persists even in the presence of surface defects, in contrast to RA sharply increasing with reducing thickness for films of conventional metals, such as Cu, in the presence of surface defects. These results underscore the potential of topological semimetals as future back-end-of-line (BEOL) interconnect metals.
Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997
Thomas E. Karis, C. Mark Seymour, et al.
Rheologica Acta
Sharee J. McNab, Richard J. Blaikie
Materials Research Society Symposium - Proceedings
Fernando Marianno, Wang Zhou, et al.
INFORMS 2021