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Technology Research News
September 22, 2004
Nanowire Makes Standup Transistor Researchers have devised a simple way to make a set of vertical transistors from nanowires. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
May 2013
Alexander Hellemans
Nanowire Transistors Could Keep Moore's Law Alive Researchers are perfecting ways to produce gate-all-around devices mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
October 8, 2003
Process orders nanowire arrays Harvard University researchers have found a way to neatly layer and pattern rows of nanowires. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
October 22, 2003
Nanowires boost plastic circuits The move is on to develop flexible, cheap, plastic electronics, but so far organic circuits have fallen far short of silicon chip performance. Researchers from the Hahn-Meitner Institute in Germany have moved the field forward with a new way to make flexible transistors. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
May 5, 2004
Eric Smalley
Y Switches Set up Low-Power Logic Researchers are looking into Y-branch switches, which have the potential to use less energy because they turn circuits on and off by directing electrons in one of two directions rather than opening and closing the circuit. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
September 8, 2004
Eric Smalley
Chip Architecture Uses Nanowires Nanoelectronics could eventually replace today's silicon chipmaking techniques when today's techniques run their course in a decade or two. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
August 25, 2004
Hybrid Nanowire Makes Transistor One challenge in making minuscule electronic devices from nanoscale components is wiring the components together. Researchers have found a way to transform sections of semiconducting silicon nanowires into metallic, or conducting, nickel silicide. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
January 26, 2005
Eric Smalley
Nano Bridge Builds Logic Researchers from the Japanese National Institute for Materials Science have given an old technology -- the mechanical electric switch -- a quantum update. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
October 22, 2003
Eric Smalley
Nanowires make flexible circuits Nanowires might one day be used to make microscopic machines. But before then they could help liberate computer circuits from the rigid, expensive confines of silicon chips. A process that makes thin films from semiconductor nanowires improves the prospects for plastic electronics and electronic paper. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
September 8, 2004
Nanotube Transistor Has Power Aiming to make electrical componets faster, researchers are working to make components from carbon nanotubes, which are rolled-up sheets of carbon atoms that can be smaller than a nanometer in diameter. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 24, 2006
Michael Gross
Biotronics Branches Out Harvard researchers have developed nanowire transistors that interface with individual neurons and, even better, with the individual neuronal extensions that reach out to contact other cells. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
April 2012
Liu et al.
MEMS Switches for Low-Power Logic A modern twist on a trusted old technology -- the electromechanical relay -- could lead to ultralow-power chips mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
May 2011
Keane & Kim
Transistor Aging Measuring the degradation of microprocessors is tricky. Doing it better would unleash more processing power. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
April 2005
Linda Geppert
Power to the Molecules A "crossbar latch" supplies the missing piece for a nanosize alternative to the transistor. Now, researchers at Hewlett-Packard plan to knit them into a huge circuit, hoping to put the technology on the market in about 10 years. mark for My Articles similar articles
Industrial Physicist
Konstantin Likharev
Hybrid Semiconductor-Molecular Nanoelectronics Many physicists and engineers believe that the impending crisis due to limitations in CMOS technology may be resolved only by a radical paradigm shift from purely CMOS technology to hybrid semiconductor-molecular circuits. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
February 12, 2003
Eric Smalley
Logic scheme gains power Researchers from the University of Notre Dame have pushed an alternative computer chip architecture a step forward by finding a way to refresh the short-lived signals the scheme uses to represent the 1s and 0s of digital information. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
December 2008
R. Stanley Williams
How We Found the Missing Memristor The memristor -- the functional equivalent of a synapse -- could revolutionize circuit design mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
February 2, 2005
Michael Singer
HP's 'Crossbar Latch' to Replace Transistors? The company's Quantum Science Research group comes up with new signal technology that could power computers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
August 25, 2004
Eric Smalley
Tools Design DNA-Nanotube Logic Researchers are aiming to make the process of assembling molecular-scale components easier with a suite of computer-aided design tools for designing computer circuits made from carbon nanotubes assembled by DNA. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
October 20, 2004
Eric Smalley
Biochip spots single viruses A detector recently built from nanowire transistors can identify individual virus particles in real time in unpurified samples. Labs-on-a-chip based on the device could be used to monitor diseases. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
February 11, 2004
Eric Smalley
Noise boosts nanotube antennas Sometimes adding a little noise can help a signal come through loud and clear. This is true for the neural network between your ears, and it turns out to also be true for carbon nanotubes. The result could be better cell phones, chemical detectors and video screens. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
November 2011
Ahmed & Schuegraf
Transistor Wars Rival architectures face off in a bid to keep Moore's Law alive. In May, Intel announced the most dramatic change to the architecture of the transistor since the device was invented. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
October 2007
Bohr et al.
The High-k Solution Microprocessors coming out this fall are the result of the first big redesign in CMOS transistors since the late 1960s. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
January 16, 2007
David Needle
HP Claims Chip Advance Researchers say nanotechnology has let them pack many more transistors into chips. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
January 28, 2004
Nanotubes tied to silicon circuit Connecting minuscule nanotube transistors to traditional silicon transistors enables the atomic-scale electronics to communicate with existing electronic equipment. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 7, 2012
Simon Hadlington
Nano-welding with a light touch US researchers have found a new way to weld together metal nanowires - simply by bathing them in white light. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
July 2012
Miguel Miranda
The Threat of Semiconductor Variability As transistors shrink, the problem of chip variability grows mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
June 2, 2004
Plastic Nanowires Sense Gasses Cornell University researchers have devised a simple way to position conducting polymer nanowires on an electrode, and have made a prototype high-speed chemical detector that is capable of sensing minuscule amounts of ammonia gas. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 5, 2007
Lionel Milgrom
Hafnium Oxide Helps Make Chips Smaller and Faster Intel and IBM have announced that they will use dramatically different materials to build smaller, faster transistors for their next generation of chips. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 23, 2012
Yuandi Li
Reversible photoswitch a boost for molecular electronics A team of international scientists has made a photocontrollable device, which, they say, shows potential for application in nanocircuits and helps the understanding of electrical conduction in molecular electronics. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 23, 2009
Phillip Broadwith
Opening the gate for molecular electronics Chemists in Korea and the US have shown that the current running through a transistor made of a single molecule can be regulated by tweaking its molecular orbital energies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
March 23, 2005
Layers promise cheap circuits The challenge is making organic transistors that work well electronically. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 29, 2007
James Mitchell Crow
Nanocomposites From Bubbles An efficient new way to add nanowires or nanotubes into polymer films. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
October 2007
Neil Savage
Nanowire Silicon Solar Cell for Powering Small Circuits A new type of solar cell made from a nanometer-scale wire might one day provide an on-chip power source for nanoelectronic devices or run microscopic robots, say scientists. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
December 2008
Sally Adee
The Fastest, the Smallest, and the Strangest at IEDM This year's IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting, as usual, is largely a race to the bottom mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
January 1, 2003
Matthew W. Beale
Unseen Stripes Imagine a nanowire -- 10,000 times thinner than a human hair -- that can function as a transistor, a light-emitting diode, a biochemical sensor and many other devices, all along a single candy-striped strand. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 5, 2011
Jon Cartright
Silk woven into transistors Researchers in Sweden and Spain have created transistors woven from modified silk fibres. The breakthrough bodes well for a new generation of electronic circuits that can be incorporated into fabrics or inserted into biological environments. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
May 5, 2004
Eric Smalley
Memory Stores Three Bits in One Researchers have built a prototype molecular memory device that stores three bits in the same spot, multiplying storage density without increasing the device footprint. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
March 15, 2005
Michael Singer
HP Plots Its Nano Course Company believes in moving computing beyond silicon to the world of molecular-scale electronics. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
February 25, 2004
Nanowires spot DNA mutation Nanowire sensors could eventually be built into labs-on-a-chip that could be used for medical diagnostics and pathogen detection in the field, and for drug discovery. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
March 24, 2004
Nanowires span silicon contacts One challenge in making electronics at the size-scale of molecules is finding ways to position and attach nanowires to the tiny components. Researchers from Hewlett-Packard Laboratories have succeeded in growning nanowires between electrodes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
December 3, 2003
Carbon boosts plastic circuits Researchers from the California Institute of Technology have devised an inexpensive way to add better-conducting organic source and drain electrodes to organic thin-film transistors. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
October 22, 2003
Single electrons perform logic The ultimate in transistors, which turn on and off in response to a flow of electricity, is a device that can be tripped by a single electron. Researchers from Hokkaido University have put together an AND logic circuit made from four single-electron tunneling transistors. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
October 22, 2003
Process prints nanoparticles Researchers have coaxed tiny particles of gold, silver and carbon to assemble into patterns on silicon wafers over areas as large as a square centimeter by using electrical charge patterns to attract and position the nanoparticles. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
June 15, 2005
Nanowire Computer Circuits Debut Researchers have found a way to paint molecular-size circuitry onto glass. The method is potentially very low-cost, and could eventually be used to make computer chips that pack extremely tiny and thus powerful circuits. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reactive Reports
Issue 40
David Bradley
Lighting Up with Nanowires Semiconductor nanowires are beginning to emerge as rather versatile building blocks for creating photodetectors, LEDs and lasers mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
March 26, 2003
Tilted trenches turn out tiny wires Researchers from UCLA, UCSB, and Cal Tech have found a way to make arrays of closely-spaced and crossed metal and semiconductor nanowires. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
November 2007
Sarah Adee
Transistors Go Vertical The semiconductor industry fights silicon sprawl by building up, not out. Today's CMOS transistor is planar, but chip makers are exploring more power-efficient three-dimensional structures as well as a planar structure with two gates. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 5, 2007
Lewis Brindley
Ultrasonic Waves to Power Future Nanomachines A team of materials scientists has developed an innovative nano-scale power supply which is fueled by ultrasonic waves. The scientists predict that their nanogenerator could power the next generation of nanomachines. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
June 16, 2004
Silicon Nanowires Grown in Place Researchers have found a way to grow nanowires between pairs of metal electrodes deposited on silicon wafers. mark for My Articles similar articles