Physicists Invent “QuIET”-
Single Molecule Transistors
University of Arizona physicists have
discovered how to turn single molecules into working
transistors. It's a breakthrough needed to make the
next-generation of remarkably tiny, powerful computers
that nanotechnologists dream of.
They have applied for a patent on their device, called
Quantum Interference Effect Transistor, nicknamed "QuIET."
The American Chemical Society publication, "Nano
Letters," has published the researchers' article
about it online at Nano Letters. The research is planned
as the cover feature in the print edition in November.
A transistor is a device that switches electrical current
on and off, just like a valve turns water on and off
in a garden hose. Industry now uses transistors as small
as 65 nanometers. The UA physicists propose making transistors
as small as a single nanometer, or one billionth of
a meter.
"All transistors in current technology, and almost
all proposed transistors, regulate current flow by raising
and lowering an energy barrier," University of
Arizona physicist Charles A. Stafford said. "Using
electricity to raise and lower energy barriers has worked
for a century of switches, but that approach is about
to hit the wall."
Transistors can't shrink much smaller than 25 nanometers,
or 1/40,000 the width of a pinhead, because scaling
down further creates intractable energy problems, Stafford
said. Even if it were possible to build an ultra-advanced
laptop computer with molecule-sized transistors using
current transistor technology, it would take a city's
worth of electricity to run the laptop, and the thing
would get so hot it would probably vaporize.
Artist's conception of a Quantum Interference
Effect Transistor (QuIET): The colored spheres represent
individual carbon (green), hydrogen (purple), and sulfur
(yellow) atoms, while the three gold structures represent
the metallic contacts. (IMAGE: ACS Nano Letters).
Stafford, UA physicist Sumit Mazumdar
and David Cardamone, who received his doctorate from
UA in 2005, began thinking about the problem of next-generation
transistor technology three years ago. They realized
that quantum mechanics can solve the problem of how
to regulate current flow in a single-molecule transistor
that would work at room temperature.
"Our approach is a little more finesse than brute
force," Cardamone said. "We don't put up a
wall to stop current. It's just that we can regulate
how electron waves combine to turn the transistor on
or off."
The simplest molecule they propose for a transistor
is benzene, a ring-like molecule. They propose attaching
two electrical leads to the ring to create two alternate
paths through which current can flow.
They also propose attaching a third lead opposite one
of the electrical leads. Other researchers have succeeded
in attaching two contacts to a molecule this small,
but attaching the third is the trick -- and the point.
The third lead is what turns the device on and off,
the "valve."
"In classical physics, the two currents through
each arm of the ring would just add," Stafford
said. "But quantum mechanically, the two electron
waves interfere with each other destructively, so no
current gets through. That's the 'off' state of the
transistor."
The transistor is turned on by changing the phase of
the waves so they don't destructively interfere with
each other, opening up addiitonal paths through the
third lead.
"It took a while to go from the idea of how this
could work to developing realistic calculations of this
kind of system," Stafford said. "We were able
to do the simplest kind of quantum chemical calculations
which neglect interactions between different electrons
within a few weeks. But it took some time to put in
all the electron interactions that demonstrate this
really is a very robust device."
According to the Semiconductor Research Corp. it typically
takes a dozen years for a new idea to go from initial
scientific publication to commercial technological application,
Stafford noted.
"That means if the computer industry is to continue
its recent pace in making smaller-scale computers, we
should have had this idea yesterday, " Cardamone
said.
Why all this effort to make incomprehensibly small computers?
Why expend so much brainpower on nanocomputing?
More computing power will result in more realistic simulations,
whether you're a scientist modeling global warming or
supernovae explosions, or an entertainment industry
animator creating believable emotion in a simulated
human face, Stafford said.
Nanocomputers could have a major impact in medicine,
Cardamone said. "These machines could operate in
solution, in vivo. There already are clinical trials
of nanoparticles to deliver medicinal drugs. Imagine
how much more powerful those little nanoparticles or
nanorobots would be if they could count, or do simple
computation. With our transistors packed at maximum
density, you could put a microprocessor as powerful
as the top-of-the-line workstation on the back of an
E. coli."
"Have you seen the movie, Fantastic Voyage?"
Stafford asked. A nano-sized surgical team journeyed
through a human body in the 1966 sci-fi flick. That's
a different story, but with a similar theme.
"We're not futurists at all and can't predict it,
but imagine that you could make an artificial intelligence,
that you could have this little submarine that goes
inside somebody's arteries and capillaries to repair
them," Stafford said.
Visit www.physics.arizona.edu