Molecular electronics explores using individual molecules or nanoscale molecular collections as fundamental electronic components. This approach aims to build circuits at the ultimate limit of miniaturization, far beyond traditional silicon-based technology. Key components include molecular wires, switches, and rectifiers, leveraging quantum mechanical properties like electron tunneling through molecular orbitals for their function.
Molecular Electronics
- Ari Aviram
- Mark Ratner
The concept of molecular electronics, first conceptualized by Ari Aviram and Mark Ratner in 1974, represents a paradigm shift from top-down lithography to bottom-up self-assembly for creating electronic circuits. Their seminal paper proposed a molecular rectifier, a D-σ-A molecule (Donor-sigma bridge-Acceptor), which would allow current to flow preferentially in one direction, analogous to a semiconductor p-n diode. The principle relies on the alignment of molecular energy levels (HOMO and LUMO) under an applied bias voltage. When a voltage is applied, electrons can tunnel from an electrode, through the molecule’s orbitals, to the other electrode. The asymmetry in the D-A structure creates an asymmetric current-voltage (I-V) characteristic, which is the basis of rectification.
Beyond simple rectifiers, researchers have demonstrated molecular wires (e.g., conjugated polymers), switches that can be toggled between ‘on’ and ‘off’ states using light, heat, or electric fields, and even molecular transistors. The primary challenge lies in reliably connecting these tiny molecules to macroscopic electrodes and creating stable, reproducible devices. Techniques like scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) break junctions and mechanically controllable break junctions (MCBJs) are used in laboratory settings to measure the conductance of single molecules. While full-scale molecular computers remain a distant goal, the principles are being applied in areas like molecular sensing, where the electronic properties of a molecule change upon binding to a specific target analyte, and in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), which rely on charge transport through organic molecular films.
The field is highly interdisciplinary, merging quantum chemistry, materials science, and condensed matter physics. It promises not only extreme miniaturization but also novel functionalities derived from the unique quantum properties of individual molecules, potentially leading to devices with lower power consumption and entirely new computational models.
Type
Disruption
Utilisation
Precursors
- discovery of the electron
- development of quantum mécanique
- synthesis of complex organic molecules
- invention of the semiconductor diode
- development of scanning tunneling microscopy (STM)
Applications
- molecular-scale sensors
- ultra-high-density data storage
- organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs)
- potential for molecular computing architectures
Brevets :
Potential Innovations Ideas
!niveaux !!! Adhésion obligatoire
Vous devez être membre de l'association pour accéder à ce contenu.
DISPONIBLE POUR DE NOUVEAUX DÉFIS
Ingénieur mécanique, chef de projet ou de R&D
Disponible pour un nouveau défi dans un court délai.
Contactez-moi sur LinkedIn
Intégration électronique métal-plastique, Conception à coût réduit, BPF, Ergonomie, Appareils et consommables de volume moyen à élevé, Secteurs réglementés, CE et FDA, CAO, Solidworks, Lean Sigma Black Belt, ISO 13485 médical
Nous recherchons un nouveau sponsor
Votre entreprise ou institution est dans le domaine de la technique, de la science ou de la recherche ?
> envoyez-nous un message <
Recevez tous les nouveaux articles
Gratuit, pas de spam, email non distribué ni revendu
ou vous pouvez obtenir votre adhésion complète - gratuitement - pour accéder à tout le contenu restreint >ici<
Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles