Materials science - Bridging dimensions: Demultiplexing ultrahigh-density nanowire circuits

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Abstract

A demultiplexer is an electronic circuit designed to separate two or more combined signals. We report on a demultiplexer architecture for bridging from the submicrometer dimensions of lithographic patterning to the nanometer-scale dimensions that can be achieved through nanofabrication methods for the selective addressing of ultrahigh-density nanowire circuits. Order log 2(N) large wires are required to address N nanowires, and the demultiplexer architecture is tolerant of low-precision manufacturing. This concept is experimentally demonstrated on submicrometer wires and on an array of 150 silicon nanowires patterned at nanowire widths of 13 nanometers and a pitch of 34 nanometers.

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Beckman, R., Johnston-Halperin, E., Luo, Y., Green, J. E., & Heath, J. R. (2005). Materials science - Bridging dimensions: Demultiplexing ultrahigh-density nanowire circuits. Science, 310(5747), 465–468. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1114757

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