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Smallest Nanoelectronic with Atomic Devices with Precise StructuresSince its invention in 1948, the transistor has revolutionized our everyday life - transistor radios and TV's appeared in the early 1960s, personal computers came into widespread use in the mid-1980s, and cellular phones, laptops, and palm-sized organizers dominated the 1990s. The electronics revolution is based upon transistor miniaturization; smaller transistors are faster, and denser circuitry has more functionality. Transistors in current generation chips are 0.25 micron or 250 nanometers in size, and the electronics industry has completed development of 0.18 micron transistors which will enter production within the next few years. Industry researchers are now working to reduce transistor size down to 0.13 micron - a thousandth of the width of a human hair. However, studies indicate that the miniaturization of silicon transistors will soon reach its limit. For further progress in microelectronics, scientists have turned to nanotechnology to advance the science. Rather than continuing to miniaturize transistors to a point where they become unreliable, nanotechnology offers the new approach of building devices on the atomic scale [see sidebar]. One vision for the next generation of miniature electronics is atomic chain electronics, where devices are composed of atoms aligned on top of a substrate surface in a regular pattern. The Atomic Chain Electronics Project (ACEP) - part of the Semiconductor Device Modeling and Nanotechnology group, Integrated Product Team at the NAS Facility has been developing the theory of understanding atomic chain devices, and the author's patent for atomic chain electronics is now pending.
Document ID
20010072023
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Yamada, Toshishige
(Computer Sciences Corp. Moffett Field, CA United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
January 10, 2000
Subject Category
Spacecraft Instrumentation And Astrionics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NASA Order A-61812-D
CONTRACT_GRANT: DTTS59-99-D-00437
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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