
Charles Lieber (left) and graduate students Jie Xiang and Yue Wu have developed a technique to make wires and switches only tens of atoms in size. The process could affect all electronic circuits. (Staff photo Rose Lincoln/Harvard News Office) |
A giant step toward miniaturizationIncredibly tiny integrated circuits could have applications well beyond faster, smaller computers and cell phones with features only fantasized about today. For example, nanocircuits might make possible sensors that can detect a single virus in your blood. "It could turn manufacturing of high-end technology upside down," says Charles Lieber, Mark Hyman Jr. Professor of Chemistry. "It could affect all electronic circuits in the world. And that's really cool." This is the first time that bridging two different types of materials has been done at the nanometer level. The implications for more efficient electronics and sensing devices are obvious. Lieber is already working with Intel Corp., the world's largest producer of electronic chips. |
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