We are left to guess how the graphene fits into all this. Whatever
the case, it is still getting faster and step by step we are
mastering the art of producing nano thick layers of useful materials
like moly oxide.
Physics has become the science of very thin materials and we are
seeing ample surprises. We are not quite to the point of
manufacturing things one atom at a time but it does not appear so
unattainable today. We are certainly close enough to reasonably
understand the activity produced.
But yes a number of breakthroughs have opened up the potential for
vast improvements again and progress appears swift.
New 2D material for
next generation high-speed electronics
Jan 23, 2013
http://www.spacemart.com/reports/New_2D_material_for_next_generation_high_speed_electronics_999.html
The material - made up
of layers of crystal known as molybdenum oxides - has unique
properties that encourage the free flow of electrons at ultra-high
speeds. In a paper published in the January issue of materials
science journal Advanced Materials, the researchers explain how they
adapted a revolutionary material known as graphene to create a new
conductive nano-material.
Graphene was created
in 2004 by scientists in the UK and won its inventors a Nobel Prize
in 2010. While graphene supports high speed electrons, its physical
properties prevent it from being used for high-speed electronics.
The CSIRO's Dr Serge
Zhuiykov said the new nano-material was made up of layered sheets -
similar to graphite layers that make up a pencil's core.
"Within these
layers, electrons are able to zip through at high speeds with minimal
scattering," Dr Zhuiykov said.
"The importance
of our breakthrough is how quickly and fluently electrons - which
conduct electricity - are able to flow through the new material."
RMIT's Professor
Kourosh Kalantar-zadeh said the researchers were able to remove "road
blocks" that could obstruct the electrons, an essential step for
the development of high-speed electronics.
"Instead of
scattering when they hit road blocks, as they would in conventional
materials, they can simply pass through this new material and get
through the structure faster," Professor Kalantar-zadeh said.
"Quite simply, if
electrons can pass through a structure quicker, we can build devices
that are smaller and transfer data at much higher speeds.
"While more work
needs to be done before we can develop actual gadgets using this new
2D nano-material, this breakthrough lays the foundation for a new
electronics revolution and we look forward to exploring its
potential."
In the paper titled
'Enhanced Charge Carrier Mobility in Two-Dimensional High Dielectric
Molybdenum Oxide,' the researchers describe how they used a process
known as "exfoliation" to create layers of the material ~11
nm thick.
The material was
manipulated to convert it into a semiconductor and nanoscale
transistors were then created using molybdenum oxide.
The result was
electron mobility values of >1,100 cm2/Vs - exceeding the current
industry standard for low dimensional silicon.
The work, with RMIT
doctoral researcher Sivacarendran Balendhran as the lead author, was
supported by the CSIRO Sensors and Sensor Networks Transformational
Capability Platform and the CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering
Division.
It was also a result
of collaboration between researchers from Monash University,
University of California - Los Angeles (UCLA), CSIRO, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) and RMIT.
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