Scientists create working transistor from single atom

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skyblue1
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20 Feb 2012, 6:20 pm

Researchers from the University of New South Wales, Purdue University and the University of Melbourne have achieved a breakthrough in computing by creating a working one-atom transistor, beating Moore's Law's prediction by eight years.


Researchers, in a cross-continental effort by the University of New South Wales, Purdue University and the University of Melbourne, have achieved an astonishing feat: the first-ever creation of a working transistor from a single atom.

Since 1954, when Texas Instruments scientist, George Teal, created the first silicon transistor, the innovations in creating smaller and smaller transistors have paved the way for the manufacturing of today’s computers and mobile devices. A single device may hold billions of transistors, which work together in concert to perform simple binary calculations. With more transistors packed into a specified area, calculations will become faster and computers will be able to store more information, all the while requiring less power than contemporary transistors.

The creation of single-atom transistors using silicon has been recreated in the past, albeit accidentally. Until today, the margin of error to beat has been ten nanometers. (A nanometer equals one billionth of a meter, just FYI.) But for a single-atom transistor to be utilized in computers and other devices for practical use, requires the ability to isolate and situate a single atom accurately onto a silicon chip. According to nanotechnology journal Nature Nanotechnology, however, this is precisely what the researchers have done.

Here’s how they did it: Using a scanning tunneling microscope (a device that allows researchers to see the atoms, and provides them the precision necessary for atom manipulation) the researchers etched a narrow channel into a silicon base. Phosphine gas was then deployed, which carried an isolated atom of phosphorous to a desired area between two electrodes. When an electric current was passed through the device, it amplified and switched electrical signals — just like any other working transistor.

The milestone achievements of the Australian universities in conjunction with Purdue, brings mankind one step closer to the practicality of manufacturing quantum computers. Amazingly, the team has also defied Moore’s Law (based on a statement by Gordon Moore to Electronics Magazine in 1965), which estimates the rate at which the number of transistors that can fit on a single circuit will double. Following the rate of doubling every 18 months to two years, Moore’s Law predicts that a working single-atom transistor would be created by 2020. Today, thanks to researchers, this mind-blowing benchmark has been achieved about eight years earlier than anticipated.

Not surprisingly, the research’s undertaking was inspired by Moore’s Law. “We really decided 10 years ago to start this program to make single-atom devices as fast as we could, and try and beat that law,” said Michelle Simmons, director of the ARC Centre for Quantum Computation and Communications, and the team’s head researcher. “So here we are in 2012, and we’ve made a single-atom transistor in roughly about eight to 10 years ahead of where the industry is going to be.”

Despite the breakthrough, you won’t be seeing its application for classical computing for the next 15 to 20 years, according to Gerhard Klimeck, professor and director of Purdue’s research group. ”This technology researchers used to create the device will not scale up to billions of devices,” Klimeck informed Digital Trends. Until the process to manufacture and operate the device — which can only currently function in minus 391 degrees — is refined for the transistor’s use outside of labs, the device in its current state is just a working proof of concept.

http://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/ ... ngle-atom/


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20 Feb 2012, 6:29 pm

You know, eventually things are going to get too small. What are we supposed to do when our cellphones start slipping between our fingers?



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20 Feb 2012, 8:54 pm

Andy Rooney did a show on how technology has gotten so small that he had to use a pencil eraser to press the buttons on his cell phone, cuz his fingertips took up the space of 4 numbers. That was when they were making cell phones as small as possible, but it seems, iphones,droids etc have corrected that problem.

You can get so small, that it becomes inefficient, which is what Andy was trying to say.

As far as this 1 celled device...interesting, Luckily when it breaks, you only have to fix one part.

Btw...is that like a mechanical cell, or a biological cell??

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20 Feb 2012, 9:01 pm

jojobean wrote:
Andy Rooney did a show on how technology has gotten so small that he had to use a pencil eraser to press the buttons on his cell phone, cuz his fingertips took up the space of 4 numbers. That was when they were making cell phones as small as possible, but it seems, iphones,droids etc have corrected that problem.

You can get so small, that it becomes inefficient, which is what Andy was trying to say.

As far as this 1 celled device...interesting, Luckily when it breaks, you only have to fix one part.

Btw...is that like a mechanical cell, or a biological cell??

Jojo
silicon based


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20 Feb 2012, 10:01 pm

Hmm, so size does matter after all :D


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20 Feb 2012, 10:33 pm

AspieWolf wrote:
Hmm, so size does matter after all :D
especially if you want something small enough to fit inside arteries and veins, like bots that can repair damaged organs and such ( just one possible application )


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20 Feb 2012, 10:38 pm

skyblue1 wrote:
AspieWolf wrote:
Hmm, so size does matter after all :D
especially if you want something small enough to fit inside arteries and veins, like bots that can repair damaged organs and such ( just one possible application )


I know. I am a retired engineer and still try to keep up with what's happening. I could really use some of those medi-bots myself to clean out the plumbing.


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skyblue1
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20 Feb 2012, 10:54 pm

AspieWolf wrote:
skyblue1 wrote:
AspieWolf wrote:
Hmm, so size does matter after all :D
especially if you want something small enough to fit inside arteries and veins, like bots that can repair damaged organs and such ( just one possible application )


I know. I am a retired engineer and still try to keep up with what's happening. I could really use some of those medi-bots myself to clean out the plumbing.
I want me some fesh stem cells for my heart, lungs and a new brain would be fine also :)


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