- The new growth method is 1,000 times faster than conventional techniques
- Liquid gold and tungsten form the bilayer substrate for this process.
- Monolayer tungsten silicon nitride films reached a size of 1.4 by 0.7 inches
Chinese researchers have developed a wafer-scale 2D semiconductor growth method that works approximately 1,000 times faster than conventional techniques.
The Metals Research Institute team redesigned the chemical vapor deposition process by introducing a bilayer of liquid gold and tungsten as a substrate.
This method enabled wafer-scale growth of monolayer tungsten silicon nitride films with tunable doping properties.
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Why 2D materials are important for the future of chips
The resulting films reached dimensions of approximately 1.4 x 0.7 inches, marking a step toward scalable manufacturing of high-performance 2D semiconductors.
For decades, Moore’s Law predicted a doubling of computing power roughly every two years, but as transistor dimensions approach atomic scales, quantum effects and heat dissipation make further miniaturization increasingly difficult.
2D semiconductors have become a leading candidate for post-Moore chip materials, as growing workloads from AI tools and large language models are pushing current chip architectures to the limit.
Modern transistor architectures depend on complementary pairing of n-type and p-type materials.
The scarcity of high-performance p-type options has become a major limitation for next-generation chip design, as while many 2D n-type semiconductors are well established, achieving stable p-type counterparts remains a challenge.
“The lack of high-performance p-type materials has become a critical obstacle to the development of 2D semiconductors with nodes smaller than 5 nanometers,” said Zhu Mengjian of the National University of Defense Technology.
Monolayer tungsten silicon nitride films combine several key advantages for advanced transistor design.
These include high hole mobility, high active-state current density, mechanical strength, efficient heat dissipation, and chemical stability.
The method expands single-crystal domains to submillimeter sizes and increases production speed from about 0.00004 inches over five hours to about 0.0008 inches per minute.
This represents an increase of around 1000 times compared to conventional approaches.
The research represents progress in 2D semiconductor manufacturing, but the gap between growing centimeter-scale films in a laboratory and mass producing defect-free wafers remains enormous.
The gold-based substrate, although effective for research, would be prohibitively expensive for high-volume production.
China’s ambition to overcome existing semiconductor limitations is understandable, and this study is a breakthrough.
Unfortunately, the industry has seen many promising 2D materials fail to make it from academic papers to manufacturing plants.
Whether this material follows the same path will depend on resolving the scalability and cost challenges that have doomed previous options.
Through interesting engineering
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