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New Generation of Molecular Electronics
New Generation of Molecular Electronics Promises Dramatic Increases in Computing Power
2002

Named Breakthrough of the Year 2001 by Science magazine, the wiring of the first ever molecular-scale circuits pushes the fundamental limits of trends in computing, raising hopes for a brave new world of nano-electronics. 

Computer chips containing components at molecular scale could accommodate billions of transistors, compared to some 40 million for today's state-of-the-art chips.  As the Science article noted, "If researchers can wire these circuits into intricate computer chip architecture, this new generation of molecular electronics will undoubtedly provide computing power to launch scientific breakthroughs for decades." 

The goal of an NSF-supported project at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) is to train young scientists for the rapidly approaching age of nanotechnology.  Led by James Heath and Fraser Stoddart, a UCLA research group first created a rudimentary molecular switch in 1999.  By 2001, they and four other labs had succeeded in hooking up such devices into complex molecular circuits capable of carrying out actual computing operations. 

The UCLA team used molecules called rotaxanes to serve as molecular transistors at circuit junctions.  Each junction in the circuit, composed of polysilicon (shown above in yellow) and titanium/aluminum wires, contains about 5,000 molecules and occupies an area of 7,000 square nanometers.

For more information, contact Fraser Stoddart at stoddart@chem.ucla.edu, (310) 206-7078.

ECS1Nugget_copy

Designed and produced by young scientists being trained in an NSF-supported project at UCLA, this viewgraph depicts a two-dimensional molecular electronic circuit, an exciting development that could dramatically increase computing power and usher in a new age of nano-electronics.