Abstract
Field-effect transistors based on carbon nanotubes have been shown to be faster and less energy consuming than their silicon counterparts. However, ensuring these advantages are maintained for integrated circuits is a challenge. Here we demonstrate that a significant reduction in the use of field-effect transistors can be achieved by constructing carbon nanotube-based integrated circuits based on a pass-transistor logic configuration, rather than a complementary metal-oxide semiconductor configuration. Logic gates are constructed on individual carbon nanotubes via a doping-free approach and with a single power supply at voltages as low as 0.4V. The pass-transistor logic configurarion provides a significant simplification of the carbon nanotube-based circuit design, a higher potential circuit speed and a significant reduction in power consumption. In particular, a full adder, which requires a total of 28 field-effect transistors to construct in the usual complementary metal-oxide semiconductor circuit, uses only three pairs of n-and p-field-effect transistors in the pass-transistor logic configuration. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Ding, L., Zhang, Z., Liang, S., Pei, T., Wang, S., Li, Y., … Peng, L. M. (2012). CMOS-based carbon nanotube pass-transistor logic integrated circuits. Nature Communications, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1682
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