AI Article Synopsis

  • Conventional top-down lithography struggles to reliably create devices at atomic scales, while bottom-up methods allow for the production of identical molecules and nanoparticles that can self-assemble on surfaces.
  • A new scalable method has been developed to connect a self-assembled monolayer of nanoparticles with a layer of graphene, facilitating the integration of these nanoscale objects into electronic circuits.
  • This technique achieves a high yield of single-electron effects with significant potential applications in electronics, such as memory, switches, sensors, and thermoelectric generators.

Article Abstract

It is challenging for conventional top-down lithography to fabricate reproducible devices very close to atomic dimensions, whereas identical molecules and very similar nanoparticles can be made bottom-up in large quantities, and can be self-assembled on surfaces. The challenge is to fabricate electrical contacts to many such small objects at the same time, so that nanocrystals and molecules can be incorporated into conventional integrated circuits. Here, we report a scalable method for contacting a self-assembled monolayer of nanoparticles with a single layer of graphene. This produces single-electron effects, in the form of a Coulomb staircase, with a yield of 87 ± 13% in device areas ranging from < 800 nm to 16 μm, containing up to 650,000 nanoparticles. Our technique offers scalable assembly of ultra-high densities of functional particles or molecules that could be used in electronic integrated circuits, as memories, switches, sensors or thermoelectric generators.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8280191PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24233-2DOI Listing

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