IBM has demonstrated a nine nanometer (9nm) carbon nanotube transistor (CNT) -- the smallest CNT ever made, and significantly smaller than any commercial silicon transistor. At 9nm, IBM's transistor ...
Using a CNT, Dr. Lee Yoon-hee, a senior researcher at the Division of Biotechnology within the Convergence Research Institute, developed a molecular research transistor, or molecule glasses, with ...
Semiconducting CNTs possess several advantages over traditional silicon, including higher carrier mobility and better electrostatic control at nanoscale dimensions. These properties make them ...
Carbon nanotubes are the leading candidate to replace silicon in semiconductor chips after the decades-long run of silicon electronics runs out. And IBM is hoping to usher along that transition with a ...
A new technical review paper titled “Carbon nanotube transistors: Making electronics from molecules” was published by researchers at Duke University, Northwestern University, and Stanford University. ...
DGIST (President Lee Kun-woo) announced that Dr. Lee Yoon-hee, a senior researcher at the Division of Biotechnology within the Convergence Research Institute, developed a carbon nanotube (CNT) ...
Researchers at Stanford University have become the first group to publicly demonstrate a computer chip fashioned entirely out of carbon nanotube transistors. When silicon finally reaches the end of ...