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Based on arrays of individual electroluminescent silver nanoclusters, the quantum devices could provide a foundation for new forms of specialized molecular-scale computing. The research, sponsored by the National Science Foundation, is reported in the March 18 issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"In effect, we are demonstrating optoelectronic transistor behavior," said Robert Dickson, a professor in Georgia Tech's School of Chemistry and Biochemistry. "Instead of measuring current output as in standard electronic transistors, we measure electroluminescent output for a given voltage input. Our devices act in a way that is analogous to a transistor with light as the output instead of electrical current."
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Because the nanoclusters possess different energy levels, they can be
addressed individually by varying the voltage injected into the array
of clusters with a simple two-terminal system. Avoiding the need for isolated
electrical connections to each nanocluster makes the system far easier
to fabricate at the nanometer scale than electronic devices of traditional
design.
Key to the new devices developed by Dickson and collaborator Tae-Hee Lee
is the specific voltages at which the clusters which contain between
two and eight silver atoms emit light when electrically excited.
To operate, the devices require at least two separate electrical pulses, which can be varied in amplitude. Electroluminescence occurs only after the second pulse, which activates nanoclusters within the array depending on the voltage level to which each one responds. Because each nanocluster only responds to very specific voltages, the combined current delivered by the pulses activates only specific clusters, which are observed optically.
"By reading the emission output of two correlated molecules, we
can add pulses together and perform a very simple but very important basic
addition operation," Dickson noted. "The response is relatively
narrow. Only when you have exactly the right voltage do you get a response.
We see really clean on-off behaviors with this system."
Applying different pulses can also cause individual clusters to operate
as logic gates with AND, OR, NOT and XOR functions. "By using this
complicated on-off behavior and the discrete energy levels of different
molecules, we can get complicated behavior in a relatively simple device,"
he said.
Increasing the number of clusters operating together could permit formation
of large optoelectronic arrays able to perform complex operations. As
long as each cluster could be separated enough to be resolved by a camera,
arrays could contain thousands of clusters.
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"This suggests the potential for an exciting degree of complexity,"
Dickson said. "If you can put molecules that have well-defined electronic
energy levels into an array addressable with just two terminals, then
you can begin to perform very complicated calculations."
Dickson doesn't expect the new optoelectronic devices to replace traditional
semiconductor-based computers for ordinary tasks. Instead, they might
be used for complex and highly specialized computations that are difficult
for traditional computing systems.
"Because of the inherent parallel nature of the system and the discrete
energy levels of the clusters, there may be many applications here,"
he said. "There is inherent beauty in this device being so simple
and yet able to perform these interesting calculations. There are a lot
of opportunities and challenges."
Dickson hopes the new devices will also encourage a different way of
thinking about computing on the nanometer scale.
"Many people are trying to shrink electronics down to the nanometer
scale and take advantage of the interesting properties that arise when
you make things very small, but often they are using standard architectures
to create logic circuits," he said. "We are using a novel architecture
to do the same thing, but with an individual molecules with on-off behavior
instead of a three-terminal device made very small. I hope that this will
encourage people to think about different ways to do these operations."
One advantage of the devices their optical signal output
also poses a challenge. Because the output signal is in optical form,
it cannot be easily passed along to another device for further computing
steps. Dickson hopes that challenge can be overcome, but says that for
some complex computations, an image of the result may be sufficient.
Dickson and Lee create the nanoclusters by applying current to a slightly
oxidized thin film of silver. The current induces electromigration, which
creates a nanoscale break junction in the most resistive part of the film.
The arrays of nanoclusters form along the break.
For the future, Dickson and Lee want to learn more about how the clusters form, characterize the break region -- and gain more control over the clusters' properties.
"The clusters can be different sizes, contain different numbers
of atoms and form in different geometries, and those variations give the
different excitation profiles and emission wavelengths," he said.
"We can control where the junction forms and we are analyzing and
characterizing what's there."
The devices, which operate at room temperature, perform consistently
for several hours, but ultimately burn out because of heat.
In August 2002, Dickson and Lee reported in Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences that they had created the world's
smallest electroluminescent light source, using photon emissions from
individual molecules of silver. The optoelectronic devices build on that
earlier work.
In addition to the National Science Foundation, the research is supported
by the Dreyfus and Sloan Foundations.
RESEARCH NEWS & PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
Georgia Institute of Technology
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 100
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 USA
MEDIA RELATIONS CONTACTS:
John Toon (404-894-6986); E-mail:
john.toon@edi.gatech.edu; Fax: (404-894-4545) or Jane Sanders (404-894-2214);
E-mail: jane.sanders@edi.gatech.edu.
TECHNICAL CONTACT: Robert Dickson (404-894-4007); E-mail: dickson@chemistry.gatech.edu
WRITER: John Toon