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New Model Explains How Single Electrons Cause Damage Inside Silicon Chips
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New Model Explains How Single Electrons Cause Damage Inside Silicon Chips

Insider Brief Researchers at the UC Santa Barbara Materials Department identified a quantum mechanism showing that a single high-energy electron can break silicon–hydrogen bonds in semiconductors, explaining long-standing device degradation issues. The study reveals that so-called hot-carrier degradation is driven not by cumulative electron impacts but by a brief occupation of a previously unknown electronic state that weakens bonds and displaces hydrogen atoms. The findings also show hydrogen behaves quantum mechanically during detachment, resolving prior experimental anomalies such as energy thresholds, temperature independence, and slower degradation with deuterium, and providing a predictive framework for designing more durable electronic materials. Image: A concept illustration depicting a single “hot electron” causing a hydrogen-silicon bond to break, degrading performance (llustration by Woncheol Lee) PRESS RELEASE — Researchers in the UC Santa Barbara Materials Department have uncovered the elusive quantum mechanism by which energetic electrons break chemical bonds inside microelectronic devices — a detrimental process that slowly degrades performance over time. The discovery, published as an Editors’ Suggestion in Physical Review B, explains decades-old experimental puzzles and moves scientists closer to engineering more reliable devices. Modern electronics — from smartphones and laptops to solar cells and medical implants — depend on semiconductor materials being stable and dependable for many years. Yet even the most advanced devices suffer gradual wear that eventually limits their performance. The leading culprit is “hot-carrier degradation,” a phenomenon that causes electrically energized electrons to trigger chemical changes deep inside the device. Until now, the precise physical mechanisms behind that process were unknown, limiting engineers’ ability to suppress the phenomenon. Professor Chris Van de Walle’s Computational Materials Grou

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