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Topic Name: the basic physics of nanoelectronic devices to verify the consistency of basic electrical units
Category: Electronics
Research persons: Konrad Lehnert and his group
Location: University of Colorado/JILA,CU JILA Tower, room A-225,Boulder, CO 80309, United States
Details
Konrad Lehnert
and his group investigate the basic physics of nanoelectronic devices to verify
the consistency of basic electrical units, including the amp, the volt, and the
ohm. As an initial step they want to better understand why nanoscale electronic
devices based on conventional technology operate more and more slowly, the
smaller they get. This happens because, at the nanometer scale, there's a
disparity between two different laws of nature that control resistance: the
impedence of free space and quantum resistance. The impedance of free space,
which has a value of approximately 377 ohms, controls the propagation of
electromagnetic waves through a vacuum. Quantum resistance, which is a
fundamental constant equal to 25.8 kilo ohms, controls the resistance of
electron flow through nanoscale devices. The mismatch between these two laws
means that "conventional" nanoscale electronic devices will be such poor
generators of electromagnetic waves that they won't be capable of generating
measurable signals. It also means that further miniaturization of the modern
transistor, which can now switch 10 times per nanosecond, could soon lead to
ultrasmall transistors capable of switching once a century, which is clearly
unacceptable. Consequently, Lehnert's group focuses on innovative nanoelectronic
designs that circumvent the disparity problem. "In our lab, we're not interested
in squeezing better performance out of existing technology," Lehnert says. "We'd
rather invent new technology."
The researchers know that ultra small
electronics devices will inevitably be slow unless their designers are clever.
As a result, they are working to develop microwave techniques to overcome the
slowness problem. It appears the group's new techniques will make it possible to
design transistors that are not only a hundred times smaller, but also as fast
as today's technology. The techniques will be the basis for future
nanoelectronic devices that are smaller, faster, and ultralow power. The group
is currently using its new approach to design ultralow power, superconducting
electronics for future space-based observatories.
The Lehnert group recently designed and tested
a displacement detector based on electrons tunneling across a vacuum from an
atomic point contact (APC). The APC is formed by bringing an atomically sharp
conducting point within one nanometer of another conducting object. A key design
feature is that microwave frequencies are used to detect the APC's resistance.
With the device, the researchers can both observe movement on time scales of
less than 10 nanoseconds and measure the device's backaction, or recoil force.
The device is sensitive enough to resolve sub microsecond, femtometer resonant
motion of a nanomechanical beam driven by thermal noise at temperatures of less
than 1 K.
In other work, the group is developing a
single-electron counting ammeter. The purpose of this device is to be able
measure electric current by counting individual charges. Because a nanoamp of
current moves about six billion electrons per second, the device requires
electronics that are sensitive enough to measure a flow of electrons during
nanosecond time intervals.
About researcher :
Associate Fellow of JILA
Assistant Professor Adjoint, Department of Physics
konrad.lehnert@jila.colorado.edu (303) 492-8348
Research Areas:
Nanoscience,
Precision Measurement
Funded:
JILA is one of the nation's leading research
institutes in the physical sciences. A joint institute of the University of
Colorado and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, JILA is located
on the CU campus. JILA's
NIST members
hold adjoin faculty appointments at CU.
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