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posted by chromas on Friday August 17 2018, @10:24AM   Printer-friendly
from the gonna-need-a-smaller-atom dept.

Smallest transistor switches current with a single atom in solid electrolyte:

At Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), physicist Professor Thomas Schimmel and his team have developed a single-atom transistor, the world's smallest. This quantum electronics component switches electrical current by controlled repositioning of a single atom, now also in the solid state in a gel electrolyte. The single-atom transistor works at room temperature and consumes very little energy, which opens up entirely new perspectives for information technology. The transistor is presented in Advanced Materials.

[...] In Advanced Materials, the KIT researchers present the transistor that reaches the limits of miniaturization. The scientists produced two minute metallic contacts. Between them, there is a gap as wide as a single metal atom. "By an electric control pulse, we position a single silver atom into this gap and close the circuit," Professor Thomas Schimmel explains. "When the silver atom is removed again, the circuit is interrupted." The world's smallest transistor switches current through the controlled reversible movement of a single atom. Contrary to conventional quantum electronics components, the single-atom transistor does not only work at extremely low temperatures near absolute zero, i.e. -273°C, but already at room temperature. This is a big advantage for future applications.

The advance heralds a means of dramatically reducing the amount of electricity required to power electronic devices.

Full journal article is paywalled; free abstract: Fangqing Xie, Andreas Peukert, Thorsten Bender, Christian Obermair, Florian Wertz, Philipp Schmieder, Thomas Schimmel. Quasi-Solid-State Single-Atom Transistors. Advanced Materials, 2018; 30 (31): 1801225 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201801225


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by takyon on Friday August 17 2018, @10:11PM

    by takyon (881) <{takyon} {at} {soylentnews.org}> on Friday August 17 2018, @10:11PM (#722964) Journal

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-atom_transistor [wikipedia.org]

    A single-atom transistor is a device that can open and close an electrical circuit by the controlled and reversible repositioning of one single atom. The single-atom transistor was invented and first demonstrated in 2004 by Prof. Thomas Schimmel and his team of scientists at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (former University of Karlsruhe).[1] By means of a small electrical voltage applied to a control electrode, the so-called gate electrode, a single silver atom is reversibly moved in and out of a tiny junction, in this way closing and opening an electrical contact.

    Therefore, the single-atom transistor works as an atomic switch or atomic relay, where the switchable atom opens and closes the gap between two tiny electrodes called source and drain.[2][3][4] The single-atom transistor opens perspectives for the development of future atomic-scale logics and quantum electronics.

    Schimmel has had this claim to fame for 14 years now. Also, there's that word again: perspectives.

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