Shortest transistor makes its debut. (Physics).In a transistor, electrons scurry along a channel whose length partly determines the device's speed. Chip makers have devised clever schemes to shrink circuitry, including transistors and their channels, thereby speeding up electronic processing. Now, using a novel method of making transistors, Jan Hendrik Schon and his colleagues at Lucent Technologies' Bell Labs in Murray Hill Murray Hill may refer to one of the following places:
The new channels span less than a fiftieth the length of the channels typical in chips today, Schon says. They're also shorter than the channels of other single-molecule transistors made from tubular strands called carbon nanotubes (SN: 11/10/01, p. 294). To make the devices, the Lucent scientists etched etch v. etched, etch·ing, etch·es v.tr. 1. a. To cut into the surface of (glass, for example) by the action of acid. b. notches into silicon and deposited gold into them. The researchers then coated the gold with a one-molecule-thick layer of conductive organic molecules called thiols. Finally, they capped that layer with another film of gold. The area of each transistor measures 100 nm by 800 nm, the researchers report in the Oct. 18 NATURE. At first, the scientists made devices that conducted current through thousands of thiol thiol: see mercaptan. molecules at once. 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. a report in an upcoming SCIENCE, they later made transistors in which apparently a single thiol molecule was the channel. They achieved this by diluting the thiols with nonconductive molecules. The new transistors have a long way to go before they can compete with conventional devices, Schon says. However, the extremely short channels bode well for making faster devices, he claims. Moreover, the fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´sh n the construction or making of a restoration. technique avoids high temperatures, the need for vacuum chambers, and other drawbacks of conventional chip making. By the time current electronics fabrication reaches its limits in the next decade or so, these new types of chips may be ready to keep the miniaturization min·i·a·tur·ize tr.v. min·i·a·tur·ized, min·i·a·tur·iz·ing, min·i·a·tur·iz·es To plan or make on a greatly reduced scale. min momentum going. --P.W. |
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