Fundamental Theory of Piezotronics

Abstract
Due to polarization of ions in crystals with noncentral symmetry, such as ZnO, GaN, and InN, a piezoelectric potential (piezopotential) is created in the crystal when stress is applied. Electronics fabricated using the inner‐crystal piezopotential as a gate voltage to tune or control the charge transport behavior across a metal/semiconductor interface or a p–n junction are called piezotronics. This is different from the basic design of complimentary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) field‐effect transistors and has applications in force and pressure triggered or controlled electronic devices, sensors, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), human‐computer interfacing, nanorobotics, and touch‐pad technologies. Here, the theory of charge transport in piezotronic devices is investigated. In addition to presenting the formal theoretical frame work, analytical solutions are presented for cases including metal–semiconductor contact and p–n junctions under simplified conditions. Numerical calculations are given for predicting the current–voltage characteristics of a general piezotronic transistor: metal–ZnO nanowire–metal device. This study provides important insight into the working principles and characteristics of piezotronic devices, as well as providing guidance for device design.

This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit: