Login:   Password:
Not Register?    Sign Up NOW!
Date: 07 November 2009
Google
 
Electronic states of quantum dots, silicon atoms may shrink computers  
Topic Name: Electronic states of quantum dots, silicon atoms may shrink computers
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Category: Electronics

Research persons: Craig S. Lent

Location: Alberta, Canada

Details

Electronic states of quantum dots, silicon atoms may shrink computers

INDIVIDUAL SILICON ATOMS can exhibit electronic properties typical of quantum dots composed of thousands of atoms, according to researchers at Canada's National Institute for Nanotechnology and the University of Alberta, Edmonton (Phys. Rev. Lett. 2009, 102, 046805). The discovery of atom-sized quantum dots and the associated room-temperature control over individual electrons may lead to a new type of circuitry that drives miniature, low-power computers.

Semiconductor nanocrystals are often called quantum dots because, among other reasons, their electronic energy levels are quantized and discrete—like an atom's. Researchers are studying that property, which ties the color of colloidal nanocrystals to their size for applications such as computing. The idea is to use the electronic states of quantum dots, which are far smaller than today's transistors, to represent the zeros and ones of digital processing.

At present, the working material for that research thrust is some the smallest quantum dots readily available—crystals of about 1,000 atoms. But to use them for computations, researchers must chill the nanocrystals to millikelvin temperatures to prevent them from flipping spontaneously between electronic states. The Edmonton team, led by Robert A. Wolkow, has discovered a way to sidestep those limitations.

Using a scanning tunneling microscope to probe hydrogen-blanketed silicon, the group showed that kicking out a hydrogen atom bonded to silicon results in a negatively charged Si atom that behaves like a quantum dot. Kicking out another nearby hydrogen leads to an artificial Si2 molecule with one electron shuttling between the two atoms (similar to H2+). Then by using a large charge, the team showed that this "bonding" electron can be pins at will, thereby locking the quantum dot into a given electronic state that remains stable even at room temperature.

"These results are remarkable," says Craig S. Lent, professor of electrical engineering at the University of Notre Dame. Wolkow's group has demonstrated a new binary switching mechanism that operates at room temperature and at a truly atomic size scale, he explains. Lent adds "The world is looking for a new binary switch to replace the transistor when size scaling ends. This just might be it."

Video

Click below for a description and an animated depiction of the properties of atomic quantum dots.

Robert A. Wolkow/University of Alberta * Macromedia Flash Player 8 is required to view video.


Tags: quantum dot - silicon atom - Nanotechnology - atom-sized quantum dot - Semiconductor nanocrystal - -
Research Documents:
Related research: nanowire-based nanotechnology: sublithographic programmable logic arrays, A Colossus Gets its Name, Air cooling of new computer chips, An intelligent cars, Angle-Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy, Atomic Clocks: a new generation of passive hydrogen maser, Container protecting & navigating robots by sensing network, Electrically Measuring Method for a Quantum State of a Semiconductor Artificial Molecule : Applications in quantum information processing are expected, Faster Graphene Transistors: Graphene circuits could lead to high-speed wireless devices and advanced weapons detectors., Flexible electronics with high-performance organic transistors., Flow specially of tiny bubbles specially microfluidic device mimics computer circuitry, How defects in the two-dimensional carbon crystal affect charge flow through the material, Important Milestone on the Way to the Setup of a New Standard for Capacitance using a Single-Electron Pump, Intruder alert: 'Smart Dew' will find you!, Lithography Past Light's Limits: A new optical etching technique could lead to faster microchips., Micro- and Nano- Systems Cluster, New Elastic circuit connectors designed for rubber-band-like circuits, New graphene transistor, New radio chip mimics human ear, could enable universal radio, New vibration-powered generator for wireless systems, New ways to combat the persistent problem of thermal management, Photonics: silicon reaches 200 gigabits per second, Physicists put a new spin on electrons, Research integrates photonic circuitry on a silicon chip, Researchers at Chalmers have succeeded in combining integrated receiver for high frequency applications

Add Research

Full Name *
Email address *
Location
Your Research *

 
Home | Members.Benefit | Privacy.Policy | Bookmark.This.Page | Contact.Us
© 2006 - 2007 4engr. All Rights reserved

|Conveyor technology