Graphene Circuit               Science/AAAS
IBM researchers have built the first integrated circuit based on graphene,  a breakthrough the company says could herald a future based on graphene  wafers instead of silicon. The circuit, a 10 gigahertz frequency mixer,  could give wireless devices greater range. At higher frequencies, the  technology could someday allow law enforcement and medical personnel to  see inside objects or people without the harmful effects of X-rays,  according to IBM.
The circuit was built on a silicon carbide wafer and consists of  graphene field-effect transistors. Last year, the same IBM team  demonstrated the first graphene-based transistor, capable of operating at 100 GHz, but this time they integrated it into a complete circuit. 
The circuit is a broadband radio-frequency mixer, which, as IEEE Spectrum  explains, is a crucial component of radios. It creates new radio  signals by finding the sum and difference between two input frequencies.  IBM’s circuit performed frequency mixing up to 10 GHz, and worked well  up to 257 degrees F. The research team believes it can get even faster —  if so, chips like these could improve cell phone and transceiver  signals, possibly allowing phones to work in spots where they currently  can’t receive service, the company says. 
Several teams have been working on graphene transistors and receivers,  but it has been difficult to marry the single-carbon-atom sheets to the  metals and alloys used on chips. This circuit also uses aluminum, gold  and palladium, for instance, which do not adhere well to graphene.  What’s more, graphene can be easily damaged in the etching process, as  Yu-Ming Lin and colleagues at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center  explain in a paper about the new circuit. 
The team figured out a new process that clears those hurdles by  growing graphene on the silicon face of the silicon-carbide wafer. Then  they coated the graphene in a polymer, conducted the necessary etching,  and removed the polymer using some acetone. The transistor gates are  only 550 nanometers long, and the entire wafer is the size of a grain of  salt, IBM says. 
It will still be a while before graphene FET chips start taking over  Silicon (Graphene?) Valley, however. The IBM team already has a few  ideas for improving next-generation designs, including the use of  different metals that don’t degrade graphene’s superb electrical  conductivity.
The research is reported in today’s issue of the journal Science.







 
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