TRANSISTORS

A scanning tunneling microscope image of a narrowband metallic graphene nanoribbon. The white spots refer to the orbitals occupied by a single electron that are carefully organized to produce long-range conductive states. The width of this strip is only 1.6 nanometers. [Courtesy: Daniel Rizzo of UC Berkeley]

Metallic carbon electric circuits for the development of faster and more efficient transistors

Transistors based on carbon and not on silicon will be able to accelerate the speed of computing and reduce the energy consumption of devices such as computers, mobile phones and the like
Chris Robinson, Eigler's Eyes presented at the Nano Israel conference, March 2012

A semiconductor with a thickness of one atom

XNUMXD demonstration of a transistor on a single atom. The single phosphorus atom will be placed exactly in the center. Photo: University of New South Wales, Australia

A monoatomic transistor is the perfect transistor

Fast graphene transistor. Illustration: IBM

A world record in graphene-based transistors

The Jacquard loom on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester was one of the first devices that could be programmed.

The next twenty years of microchips

Artist's impression of a DNA transition in a graphene nanogate

DNA scanning using graphene nano-nozzles

Professor Lin Lu. Photo: Robin Block of the Chemical Engineering Department at Princeton

Plastic solar panels

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Understanding the process of electrical conduction in transistors

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

The road to a quantum computer has shortened significantly