README.md - Role of Carbon in Ti₃SiC₂ MAX Phase
Overview
This simulation models a minimal 3-stack kernel built on a carbon substrate using Ti₃SiC₂ MAX phase architecture. The structure integrates 6 elements: Carbon [6], Silicon [14], Xenon [54], Sulfur [16], Titanium [22], and Silver [47].
Why Carbon is Critical for Ti₃SiC₂ MAX Phase
- Structural Backbone: Ti₃SiC₂ is a layered hexagonal MAX phase where carbon atoms occupy octahedral sites between Ti₃C₂ layers. The C atoms form strong Ti-C bonds with sp³ hybridization from the 2s²2p² configuration.
- Electrical Anisotropy: C layers provide metallic-like conductivity in-plane while maintaining ceramic stability. This enables the dual 2-laser excitation of C 2s²2p² orbitals shown as IN L0/L1.
- Thermal Stability: Carbon's high bond energy (348 kJ/mol for C-C, 423 kJ/mol for Ti-C) allows Ti₃SiC₂ to remain stable up to 1400°C, critical for the Xe gas gap operation without decomposition.
- Damage Tolerance: Unlike pure TiC, the layered MAX phase allows C planes to slide under stress, giving the kernel mechanical resilience. Si layers act as weak planes enabling kinking and delamination.
- Electronic Configuration: C's 2s²2p² valence enables 4-fold coordination, bridging 6 Ti atoms per unit cell. Without C, you lose the MAX phase entirely and revert to Ti₃Si intermetallic with poor oxidation resistance.
Kernel Stack Architecture
Bottom to Top:
- Layer 1 - C Substrate: Diamond/SiC base with 2-laser addressable C atoms. Provides epitaxial template for Ti₃SiC₂ growth.
- Layer 2 - Ti Traces: Hexagonal Ti layers form conductive pathways. Ti bonds to C in octahedral coordination.
- Layer 3 - S Trap: Sulfur intercalation layer acts as charge trap/switch. Forms Ti-S-C bridges affecting OUT± differential.
- Layer 4 - Xe Gas Gap: Xenon-filled microcavity between stacks. Pressure-tunable dielectric. Breakdown voltage controls delay time.
- Layer 5 - Ag Core: Silver central conductor. Ag provides low-resistance path for GND and OUT current collection.
Connection Mapping
- IN L0, IN L1: Dual 405nm/520nm lasers pumping C 2s²→2p² transition. Orthogonal polarization for state encoding.
- OUT+, OUT-: Differential output from Ag core and Ti traces. Amplitude modulated by S trap occupancy.
- GND: Ag core reference. Sinks current from Ti₃SiC₂ layers.
- Xe Gap: Capacitive gap. Pressure changes ionize Xe, altering permittivity and switching delay.
Material Toggle Comparison
- C (Diamond): Highest thermal conductivity, wide bandgap. Ideal substrate but no MAX phase.
- Si: Standard CMOS compatible, but forms SiO₂ interface states. No carbide bonding with Ti.
- Ti₃SiC₂: Optimal. Combines metal-like conductivity, ceramic stability, and self-healing microcracks. C enables all three.
Metrics Explained
- D - Displacement: Lattice strain in nm from Xe pressure on Ti₃SiC₂ layers. >0.5nm indicates plastic deformation.
- OUT Current: Total current through Ag core. Depends on S trap state, laser power, and Xe breakdown.
- Delay Time: Signal propagation through Xe gap. Inversely proportional to pressure via Paschen's Law.