Carbon Nanotube Interconnect Technologies for Future LSIs

2010 
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are attractive as nanosize structural elements from which devices can be constructed by bottom-up fabrication. A CNT is a macromolecule of carbon and is made by rolling a sheet of graphite into a cylindrical shape. CNTs exhibit excellent electrical properties that include current densities exceeding 109 A/cm2 and ballistic transport along the tube. Because of these factors, with their large electro-migration tolerance and low electrical resistance, CNTs can be used as nano-size wiring materials, and are thus becoming potential candidates for future LSI interconnects. Much effort has been made to produce CNT vias, which use bundles of MWNTs (multi-walled carbon nanotubes), as vertical wiring materials as shown in Figure 1. Sato et al. demonstrated low-resistance CNT vias employing a novel metallization technology, which used preformed catalyst metal particles, to grow dense MWNT-bundles by thermal chemical vapor deposition (CVD).
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