| Media
Contacts:
Dr. Christopher
B. Gorman, 919/515-4252
Paul K. Mueller,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Nov.
18, 2003
Molecule
by Molecule, NC State Scientists Design a New Transistor
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 |
Data
collected by R. Fuierer |
A
patterned collection of molecules
created and visualized using scanning tunneling
microscopy like that used to help create the nanoscale
transistor. |
When
amazing new computers and other electronic devices emerge,
they will have been conceived and incubated in university
laboratories like that of Dr. Chris Gorman, professor
of chemistry
at North Carolina State University. There, the scientist
and his multidisciplinary team are working to build,
molecule by molecule, a nanoscale transistor.
That’s an electronic switch so
small it can only be seen with a high-tech device called
a scanning tunneling microscope. And if you go to the
library to find the “how-to” book, says
Gorman, “most of the pages will be blank, because
nobody yet knows how to do it.”
And that, for the chemists, engineers
and students engaged in the project, is what makes their
painstaking, pioneering research so satisfying. If they
can design and construct a nanoscale transistor, Gorman,
his colleagues and his students will have filled in
many of the blank pages in the how-to book. The field
is so new, the research avenues so unexplored, that
each experiment, each variation, helps write that book.
Their work is guided by the “bottom-up”
approach to building something, says Gorman. “Most
things are built using ‘top-down’ methods,”
he explains, “where you take a chunk of metal,
stone or wood and carve off the material you don’t
want, until you have an I-beam or a two-by-four. In
contrast, we’re interested in assembling molecules,
and building a functioning transistor – with as
few of the molecules as possible.”
A
persuasive advocate of multidisciplinary research, Gorman
is working with NC State colleagues Dr. Daniel L. Feldheim,
associate professor of chemistry, and Dr. Gregory N.
Parsons, professor of chemical engineering, to combine
this bottom-up approach with Parsons’ top-down
engineering in the creation of the nanoscale transistor.
Parsons will construct a molecular platform with a tiny
indentation into which Gorman, Feldheim and their student
team hope to fit a molecular “plug.” The
resulting structure should function as an electronic
switch – the definition of a transistor.
“Our research will tackle two
critical issues in future materials for advanced molecule-based
information processing,” says Gorman. “One,
how to assemble and attach single molecules to electronic
contacts and, two, how to create electronic gain –
the fundamental operating principle of a transistor
– at the molecular level.”
The benefits of the team’s success
could be far ranging, he says. “Better techniques
for information processing will keep our economy growing
stronger by enabling smaller, faster and lighter electronics.”
Imagine, says Gorman, the contents of a library in a
postage-stamp-sized chip, and you can begin to ponder
some exciting possibilities and “the next phase
of electronics development in the United States.”
While the private sector and corporate
research and development will ultimately develop such
technologies, Gorman says, the fundamental research
– with its exploration of byways and promising
side streets, false starts as well as serendipitous
discoveries – must take place in universities,
with federal and state help.
Gorman’s research, for example,
is funded by the National Science Foundation through
its Nanoscale Interdisciplinary Research Teams (NIRT)
program.
Another must, according to Gorman,
“is fundamentally changing how the next generation
of technically savvy students is educated. In our research,
we want our students to pursue degrees that involve
traditional science, engineering and technology-development
aspects and state-of-the-art research approaches. We
also want to expand the opportunities for women and
minorities to participate in this new, interdisciplinary
paradigm.”
As evidence that this new paradigm
is already taking shape, Gorman’s undergraduate
and graduate students, “the Gorman Group,”
are fully engaged in his quest for the nanoscale transistor.
From the newest students, such as Tiffani Bailey and
Jennifer Ayres, to rising juniors such as Bill Capshaw
and Jonah Jurss, to veteran grad students such as Tyson
Chasse and Drew Wassel, among others, the group collaborates
in exploring the nanoscale realms for promising applications.
“With the increasingly fast pace
of technological change,” says Gorman, “it’s
possible that many of the rules that we teach students
in college can be obsolete by the time they graduate.
That’s why we must focus on how to think, how
to solve problems, how to explore the unexpected avenues
and surprising new paths – and, in some ways,
to disregard traditional disciplinary boundaries.”
Disregarding traditional boundaries
may be a necessary practice for all successful scientists,
especially the pioneers, such as Gorman, working at
the very edge of the possible. When the next generation
of technology transforms our lives, it will have been
conceived and perfected in university labs, built grant
by grant, student by student, molecule by molecule.
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