<span style="color: #222222;">Scientists have developed a tiny electrical circuit that may lead to new digital devices with increasing amounts of computational power packed into a smaller space. The electrical circuit created by researchers at Curtin University in Australia is made from crystals of copper that are grown and electrically wired at the nanoscale. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The researchers used a single nanoparticle to create an ensemble of different diodes – a basic electronic component of most modern electronic devices, which functions by directing the flow of electric currents. In the research published in the journal ACS Nano, the team used a single copper nanoparticle to compress in a single physical entity that would normally require many individual diode elements. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The researchers showed that each nanoparticle had an in-built range of electrical signatures and had led to something akin to 'one particle, many diodes', thereby opening up the concept of single-particle circuitry. Yan Vogel from Curtin University said that the breakthrough would enable new concepts and methods in the design of miniaturised circuitry. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">He also said Instead of wiring-up a large number of different sorts of diodes, as is done now, we have shown that the same outcome is obtained by many wires landing accurately over a single physical entity, which in our case is a copper nanocrystal.</span><br />
News On AIR | August 29, 2018 2:23 PM | Tiny crystals
Tiny crystals may lead to more powerful digital devices