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Electronics gets Y's: nanotubes branch out as novel transistors.


Y-shaped nanotubes might become a common component in ultrasmall electronic circuitry, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 scientists who have just shown that the microscopic, branched structures can function as transistors.

The microelectronics industry has been on the lookout for in search of; looking for.

See also: Lookout
 a radically new type of transistor because manufacturers are approaching physical limits on the number of transistors that they can pack into a chip. In a typical transistor, an electrical signal applied to one part of the component determines the flow of electricity through the rest. As the amount of chip space per transistor dwindles, engineers are finding it difficult to create small-enough conventional silicon transistors that are effective.

Y junctions made of nanotubes could come to the rescue, say Prabhakar R. Bandaru of the University of California, San Diego UCSD is consistently ranked among the top ten public universities for undergraduate education in the United States by U.S. News & World Report.[3] It is a Public Ivy. [1] For graduate studies, most of UCSD's Ph.D.  (UCSD UCSD University of California, San Diego (La Jolla, California)
UCSD User Centered System Design
UCSD Urbana-Champaign Sanitary District (Illinois)
UCSD Ultra Cool Sexy Dudes
) and his colleagues there and at Clemson (S.C.) University. The junctions are a variant of conventional carbon nanotubes--minuscule pipes of extraordinary strength and electrical conductivity that are composed of one or more concentric layers of carbon atoms (SN: 8/20/05, p. 115).

Other researchers had shown that a straight carbon nanotube See nanotube.  could act as a field-effect transistor field-effect transistor: see transistor.  (FET FET: see transistor.


(Field Effect Transistor) One of two major categories of transistor; the other is bipolar. FETs use a gate element that, when charged, creates an electromagnetic field that changes the conductivity of a silicon
), the predominant type of transistor in today's microchips (SN: 5/9/98, p. 294). In the September Nature Materials Nature Materials is a monthly multi-disciplinary journal aimed at bringing together cutting-edge research across the entire spectrum of materials science. The journal’s Impact Factor of 19. , Bandaru and his coworkers report that a Y junction can do the same in a much smaller space than its non-branching cousin can.

The shrinkage was possible because there's no need for a broad metal electrode, called the gate, which lies underneath the nanotube A carbon molecule that resembles a cylinder made out of chicken wire one to two nanometers in diameter by any number of millimeters in length. Accidentally discovered by a Japanese researcher at NEC in 1990 while making Buckyballs, they have potential use in many applications.  in a straight-nanotube FET. The gate's voltage controls the nanotube's current. Instead, any leg of a nanotube Y junction can control current passing through the junction's other two segments, Bandaru says.

The new work "is a truly significant step in nanoelectronics," says Hongqi Xu of Lund University in Sweden in a commentary in the same issue of Nature Materials. It "implies that realization of an entirely new class of functional circuits that extends well beyond today's FET architecture is now possible," Xu adds.

Unbranched carbon nanotubes typically grow from a carbon-rich vapor in a furnace containing metal seed particles that catalyze nanotube formation. Clemson's Apparao M. Rao forced tubes to branch into Y-shaped structures by depositing onto tube walls additional iron-titanium seeds that instigated offshoots to sprout.

In subsequent experiments on those branched tubes, Bandaru and his UCSD colleagues demonstrated that varying the amount of voltage applied to one leg of the Y could switch on or off current flowing between the other two legs. Although some theorists had previously proposed that Y junctions might act as FETs, researchers don't yet know what characteristics of the nanotubes--perhaps their shape or the iron-titanium particles--are responsible for their transistor function.

Despite the Y junctions' promise, the new components have some serious drawbacks. For one, a segment that's been switched off still permits large amounts of electrical current, up to 30 percent of the total flow, to leak through, Bandaru notes. What's more, the devices operate only at thousands of cycles per second rather than the billions that are now routine for microchips.

To emerge as successors to silicon, the branched nanotubes may have to compete with technologies such as semiconductor nanowires (SN: 5/22/04, p. 325) and circuit components based on individual organic molecules, such as rotaxanes (SN: 2/7/04, p. 87).

While acknowledging these shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
 and challenges, Bandaru points out that the junctions tested so far provide merely a "proof of principle." The early signs are promising enough that he and others expect soon to develop carbon-nanotube Y junctions with improved performance.
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Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Sep 10, 2005
Words:593
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