Michael J. Cabral, Ph.D.

Associate Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

  • Richmond VA UNITED STATES
  • Engineering West Hall Room 240
mcabral@vcu.edu

Professor Cabral specializes in engineering education and nanofabrication techniques

Contact

Media

Industry Expertise

Education/Learning
Nanotechnology
Research

Areas of Expertise

Engineering Education
Nanofabrication Techniques
Molecular Electronics

Education

University of Virginia

Ph.D.

Electrical Engineering

2004

University of Virginia

M.S.

Electrical Engineering

2003

Washington University in St. Louis

B.S.

Electrical Engineering

1997

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Selected Articles

Transport in carbon nanotube field-effect transistors tuned using low energy electron beam exposure

Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter

2010

We have studied the effect of low energy (30 keV) electron beam exposure on carbon nanotube field-effect transistors, using an electron beam lithography system to provide spatially controlled dosage. We show that reversible tuning of the transport behavior is possible when a backgate potential is applied during exposure. n-type behavior can be obtained by electron beam exposure of a device with positive gate bias, while ambipolar behavior can be obtained via negative gate bias. The observed transport behavior is relatively stable in time. We propose possible mechanisms for the observed phenomena and suggest directions for further research.

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Fabrication and Characterization of Interconnected Nanowell Molecular Electronic Devices in Crossbar Architecture

IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology

2009

The implementation of circuit architectures based on molecular electronic devices has been impeded by the availability of facile fabrication schemes for the interconnection of individual devices. The deposition and patterning of a top contact layer between adjoining devices for interconnection purposes can result in contacts of poor fidelity, which introduces artifacts in the I-V characteristics that are not attributable to molecular transport between the contacts. In this study, through the fabrication of interconnected devices within the crossbar device architecture, we demonstrate that the vapor-phase molecular deposition method for fabrication of device layers was compatible with the massively parallel microelectronic fabrication process of liftoff, for patterning of contact layers. A prepatterned device with Au bottom contacts, as well as a bilayer resist for patterning the top Au contacts through postdeposition liftoff was used as the substrate for vapor-phase deposition of a monolayer of conjugated oligo-(phenylene ethynylene) (plain-OPE) molecules and patterning of the top metal contact layer. Interconnection in series and parallel configurations was confirmed by I-V characteristics similar to classical resistors with equivalent conductivity of each individual molecular device. Additionally, to better understand molecular transport in the device junctions, we performed temperature-dependent I-V studies on individual molecular devices that were fabricated using prepatterned Au bottom contacts as the substrate for solution-phase deposition of the molecular monolayer, onto which the Au top contacts were evaporated and patterned using a shadow mask. Molecular layers of two distinctly different room-temperature I-V characteristics, including nonswitching plain-OPE and switching nitro-OPE molecular devices, were used to study the fidelity of the molecular junctions. Based on the persistence of the device characteristics of both types of molecular layers down to 100 K, and in particular, the observation of switching between "high" and "low" conductivity states at characteristic threshold voltages at all temperatures, only with nitro-OPE molecular devices, and not with plain-OPE molecular devices, we conclude that the observed transport was a characteristic molecular signature not dependent on filament formation at contacts.

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Vapor phase deposition of oligo(phenylene ethynylene) molecules for use in molecular electronic devices

Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B

2007

The field of molecular electronics is often limited by nonreproducible electrical device characteristics and low yields of working devices. These limits may result from inconsistencies in the quality and structure of the monolayers of molecules in the devices. In response, the authors have developed an ultrahigh vacuum vapor phase deposition method that reproducibly assembles monolayers of oligo(phenylene ethynylene) molecules (the chemical backbone of many of the molecules used in molecular electronics). To improve the structure and purity of the monolayer, the vapor phase assembly is performed in an ultrahigh vacuum environment using a low temperature organic thermal cell. Because vapor phase assembly does not require the use of solvents, a potential source of contamination is eliminated. The absence of solvents also permits the fabrication of complex device architectures that require photoresist patterning prior to the molecular assembly. Characterization via ellipsometry,x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and scanning tunneling microscopy shows that the monolayers are dense, chemisorbed, ordered, and chemically pure.

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