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News 22.07.2025
New publication: Recitation tasks revamped? Students’ perceptions of smartphone-based experimental and programming tasks in introductory mechanics
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News 18.09.2024
New publication: Ultrasteep Slope Cryogenic FETs Based on Bilayer Graphene

Nano Letters 24, 11454 (2024)
Cryogenic field-effect transistors (FETs) offer great
potential for applications, the most notable example being classical control electronics for quantum information processors. For the latter, on-chip FETs with low power consumption are crucial. This requires
operating voltages in the millivolt range, which are only achievable in devices with ultrasteep subthreshold slopes. However, in conventional cryogenic metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS)FETs based on bulk material, the experimentally achieved inverse subthreshold slopes
saturate around a few mV/dec due to disorder and charged defects at the MOS interface. FETs based on two-dimensional materials offer a promising alternative. Here, we show that FETs based on Bernal stacked bilayer graphene encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride and
graphite gates exhibit inverse subthreshold slopes of down to 250 μV/dec at 0.1 K, approaching the Boltzmann limit. This result indicates an effective suppression of band tailing in van der Waals heterostructures without bulk interfaces, leading to superior device performance at cryogenic temperature.