This article is more than 1 year old
The fastest nanotube in the west
Or the east, for that matter
Stateside boffins have managed to make a high-speed, carbon nanotube transistor. This is the latest in a string of devices that can be made with nanotubes, and according to the researchers, is the next step towards replacing silicon in a variety of electronic applications.
The device, built by Peter Burke and his team at the University of California at Irvine, is made from a carbon nanotube squeezed between two gold electrodes.
According to a report on NanoTechWeb the transistor works at microwave frequencies, the highest ever acheived with a nanotube transistor, but Burke reckons that is the slow end of the spectrum.
Burke said: "I estimate that the theoretical speed limit for these transistors should be around a terahertz (1012Hz), about 1000 times faster than modern computer speeds."
At the moment, it only works at 4 Kelvin, but the team is confident they can make it work at room temperature too. ®
Related stories
Xerox moots roll-your-own monitor
Nanotech buckyballs kill fish
Nanotech researchers see the light