As electronic devices continue to get smaller and smaller, physical size limitations are beginning to disrupt the trend of doubling transistor density on silicon-based microchips approximately every ...
As silicon-based electronics approach fundamental limits, researchers are turning to molecules as the smallest possible functional devices. Molecular ...
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New molecular electronics technology could exceed silicon chip density by 1,000 times
Shrinking transistors has driven computing performance for decades, but the approach is hitting physical ...
Researchers have developed a new theoretical modelling technique that could potentially be used in the development of switches or amplifiers in molecular electronics. Researchers have developed a new ...
A team of scientists from the University of Miami, in collaboration with two professors from Georgia Institute of Technology and University of Rochester, have developed a new kind of molecule that ...
The atomic switch operates by forming and breaking a tiny silver filament inside a thin film of tantalum oxide. When a positive voltage is applied, silver atoms move to create a conductive bridge ...
The miniaturization of electronic devices that use silicon-based technology will soon reach a limit and if devices are to continue getting smaller, scientists must harness the electronic properties of ...
Researchers have made a meaningful advance in the simulation of molecular electron transfer -- a fundamental process underpinning countless physical, chemical and biological processes. The study ...
Since the dawn of the computer age, researchers have wrestled with two persistent challenges: how to store ever-increasing ...
The discovery that won the latest Nobel Prize in physics seems far away from our life, but one day everything could change with the arrival of molecular gadgets. We've tried to look into the future.
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researchers report a unique strategy for controlling molecular conductance by using molecules with rigid backbones – such as ladder-type molecules, known as ...
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