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    Scientists create working transistor from a single atom

    Researchers from the University of New South Wales have achieved an astonishing feat: the first-ever creation of a working transistor from a single atom. 

    Since 1954, when Texas Instruments scientist, George Teal, created the first silicon transistor, the innovations in creating smaller and smaller transistors have paved the way for the manufacturing of today’s computers and mobile devices. A single device may hold billions of transistors, which work together in concert to perform simple binary calculations. With more transistors packed into a specified area, calculations will become faster and computers will be able to store more information, all the while requiring less power than contemporary transistors.

    The creation of single-atom transistors using silicon has been recreated in the past, albeit accidentally. Until today, the margin of error to beat has been ten nanometers. (A nanometer equals one billionth of a meter, just FYI.) But for a single-atom transistor to be utilized in computers and other devices for practical use, requires  the ability to isolate and situate a single atom accurately onto a silicon chip. According to nanotechnology journal Nature Nanotechnology, however, this is precisely what the researchers have done.

    Here’s how they did it: Using a scanning tunneling microscope (a device that allows researchers to see the atoms, and provides them the precision necessary for atom manipulation) the researchers etched a narrow channel into a silicon base. Phosphine gas was then deployed, which carried an isolated atom of phosphorous to a desired area between two electrodes. When an electric current was passed through the device, it amplified and switched electrical signals — just like any other working transistor.

    The Australian team’s milestone achievement brings mankind one step closer to the practicality of manufacturing quantum computers. Amazingly, the team has also defied Moore’s Law (based on a statement by Gordon Moore to Electronics Magazine in 1965), which estimates the rate at which the number of transistors that can fit on a single circuit will double. Following the rate of doubling every 18 months to two years, Moore’s Law predicts that a working single-atom transistor would be created by 2020. Today, thanks to the New South Wales, this mind-blowing benchmark has been achieved about eight years earlier than anticipated.

    Not surprisingly, the research’s undertaking was inspired by Moore’s Law. “We really decided 10 years ago to start this program to make single-atom devices as fast as we could, and try and beat that law,” said Michelle Simmons, director of the ARC Centre for Quantum Computation and Communications, and the team’s head researcher. “So here we are in 2012, and we’ve made a single-atom transistor in roughly about eight to 10 years ahead of where the industry is going to be.”

    Despite the breakthrough, you won’t be seeing its application for the next 15 to 20 years. Until the process to manufacture and operate the device — which can only currently function in minus 391 degrees — is refined for the transistor’s use outside of labs, the device in its current state is just a working proof of concept.

    This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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    57 comments

    • BPP66-69  •  Roseville, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      .....and skynet will become self aware at 6:48pm November 24, 2015.
    • JesseR  •  Tucker, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      It paves the way for robots in your blood stream fighting diseases, like in G.I. Joe.
    • 'care  •  3 mths ago
      Australians! Thankfully it wasn't the Chinese. Science does not discriminate.
      America needs more engineers and scientists rather than kids believing they will be reality stars or rappers or even going into finance where they make money off of money.
      Schools that have "intelligent design" in a science class does not help. Making people believe in "magic" or "superstition" only makes idiots.
      • Allahu Akbar! 3 mths ago
        Imagination is what drives innovation in case you haven't figured that out.
      • Just Me 3 mths ago
        and if you paid attention and didn't listen to the media you would know that most technological advances come from the good ol' USA.
      • 8-Bit Dave 3 mths ago
        Issac Newton believed in ID. I don't believe he was an idiot. A true idiot limits his or her perception.
    • unforgiven  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 mths ago
      That is incredible.
    • cupojoe  •  3 mths ago
      Awesome!!!
    • MJ  •  La Crosse, Wisconsin  •  3 mths ago
      I liked when they told us how it was done. I couldnt help but sarcastically laugh to myself and then think "oh well why didnt i think of that?"
    • Cubs  •  3 mths ago
      I created a hat out of a piece of paper once.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 mths ago
        did it have a pointy hat?
      • N 3 mths ago
        LOL :P
    • Rational  •  3 mths ago
      Progress...the greatest word in the dictionary! Kudos to the geniuses who accomplished this! I hope to live long enough to see/benefit from such an accomplishment! To all parents...have your kids study the sciences, the future of humanity depends on them!
    • kentoc  •  Durant, Oklahoma  •  3 mths ago
      they just have to figure out how to get millions of 12 year old chinese kids to manufacture them.
    • Regulus  •  3 mths ago
      At -391 degrees, this transistor would feel warm next to my ex's heart.
    • Rhyno  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      So...can I integrate this new discovery into my flux capacitor or not?
    • Bob  •  French Camp, California  •  3 mths ago
      these science articles are what yahoo should stick too theyre freaking awsome ,
      its humbling to know things of this magnitude exist.
      in this world of which we know so little.
      makes me want to go back to school to say the least .
    • Mordecai Irony  •  3 mths ago
      Rockin'! This and more kewl stuff at the MRS Spring Meeting at Moscone in April. Cya there!
    • lucky  •  3 mths ago
      I guess we will have to wait manyyyy years before we see it in market... probably by 2020.
    • Max Fubar  •  3 mths ago
      No, they didn't beat Moore's Law at all, it'll take 8 years to make a pracitcal version of it.
    • wes l  •  Santa Clara, California  •  3 mths ago
      By the time they manufacture the first working commercial chip, it will be 2020. Moore's Law still holds!
    • Sinner  •  3 mths ago
      George Teal, would be happy to know that his original design/concept hasn't changed but for its size. I remember the time when this(the transistor) was being employed in consumer goods. The little pocket radios... are now small ear pieces and a little control mechanism. The circuitry could still be "worked on", that is, "repaired" having done so myself as an electronics tech. That is now a throw away lifestyle... if it stops working, just throw it away and get another one. Any one else here understand what a 'transistor' does... that is, how it works? NPN or PNP ,either way.
    • Jack  •  3 mths ago
      seems like moores law is in place still since it will be 15 to 20 years before any use of this type of device! what
      • Just Me 3 mths ago
        I agree. I think Moores law is speaking on a working device in the real world, not some lab. Well then again if I were Superman I could go into space and have one work in the real world.
    • Obie  •  3 mths ago
      The human race is on the brink of something. I hope it isn't
      Armageddon.
    • Micro .  •  3 mths ago
      Australia is a deep, black budget friend of the USA. That is a fact.
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