Katja-Sophia Csizi, Emanuel Lörtscher
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Semiconductor transistors operate by modulating the charge carrier concentration of a channel material through an electric field coupled by a capacitor. This mechanism is constrained by the fundamental transport physics and material properties of such devices—attenuation of the electric field, and limited mobility and charge carrier density in semiconductor channels. In this work, we demonstrate a new type of transistor that operates through a different mechanism. The channel material is a Weyl semimetal, NbP, whose resistivity is modulated via a magnetic field generated by an integrated superconductor. Due to the exceptionally large electron mobility of this material, which reaches over 1,000,000 cm2/Vs, and the strong magnetoresistive coupling, the transistor can generate significant transconductance amplification at nanowatt levels of power. This type of device can enable new low-power amplifiers, suitable for qubit readout operation in quantum computers.
Katja-Sophia Csizi, Emanuel Lörtscher
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Preksha Tiwari, Anna Fischer, et al.
CLEO/Europe 2021
Kuniaki Saito, Kihyuk Sohn, et al.
CVPR 2023
Thilo Stöferle
MATSUS 2024