Professor Leopoldo Molina-Luna receives ERC Consolidator Grant

A look at the activity in electronic components

2023/01/31

In its current funding round, the European Research Council ERC has awarded Professor Leopoldo Molina-Luna a Consolidator Grant of around 2.1 million euros for his project “ELECTRON – Enabling spatially-resolved mapping of electric activity in operational devices at atomic-resolution”.

Advanced materials are at the heart of 21st-century innovation. They are used in a variety of industries such as semiconductors, consumer electronics, automobile manufacture and aerospace technology. The demand for products with higher functionality, performance and lower energy consumption also drives the need for new component structures and materials. The design, characterisation and testing of components for high-performance capacitors or advanced non-volatile memories are the key to improved material design and component integration.

The technology that Molina-Luna is working on for the ERC Grant is an important contribution to this. In “ELECTRON”, a measuring technique is being developed that will make it possible to directly map “brain-like” electrical activity, for instance in functional memristive components. Memristive components are a special kind of non-volatile data storage devices that work with electrical resistances and are suitable, for instance, for constructing neuronal networks.

The aim of the project is to image, for the first time, electron-beam induced currents (EBIC) in a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM). To achieve this, the team uses amplifiers that measure electric currents in a memristive component while it is exposed to an electron beam from the microscope. This happens in a similar way to functional magnetic resonance imaging in neuroscience, which tracks blood flow in the brain: the parts that are being used light up in the image. The technique that Molina-Luna and his team are researching will provide a new and unique way to visualise electrical activity in functional devices and enable them to draw conclusions with regard to the electrical potential, the electric field, work function, conductivity, and temperature.

More obvious representation of electronic and thermal changes

The new method will allow the direct observation of thermal and electronic changes in materials or electronic devices. A STEM normally maps a physical structure such as the type, number or position of atoms in the sample being examined. However, electronic and thermal changes in the material often have only a minimal effect on the physical structure, and so are very difficult and complex to detect with most common techniques.

Electronic and thermal changes can be displayed much more clearly with the STEM EBIC method, typically in only a single image and without complex calculations. Due to the significance and the potential of this method, the “ELECTRON” project focuses on bringing the spatial resolution of STEM-EBIC to atomic dimensions and, at the same time, to investigating industrially relevant electronic devices under realistic conditions.

Find a detailed report on the TU Darmstadt news page.
Read the press release of the European Research Council (31 January 2023) here.