Unsw Researchers Growing Semiconductors For Smaller Electronics
The work out of the ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies (FLEET) said that “growing” electronic components directly onto a semiconductor block avoids messy, noisy oxidation scattering that slows and impedes electronic operation. UNSW Professor Alex Hamilton said the home-grown, all single-crystal design would be ideal for making ultra-small electronic devices, quantum dots, and for quantum bit (qubit) applications. “Making computers faster requires ever-smaller transistors, with these electronic components now only a handful of nanometres in size – there are around 12 billion transistors in the postage-stamp sized central chip of modern smartphones,” the researchers said....