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Contacts:
Dr. Jonathan S. Lindsey,
919/515-6406
Paul K. Mueller,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Dec.
1, 2003
Molecular
Memories, Once Doubted, Prove Durable and Practical
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
In the ongoing quest to create computing
devices that are both incredibly small and incredibly
powerful, scientists – envisioning a future beyond
the limits of traditional semiconductors – have
been working to use molecules for information storage
and processing.
Until now, researchers were skeptical
that such molecular devices could survive the rigors
of real-world manufacturing and use, which involve high
temperatures and up to one trillion operational cycles.
But scientists at the University of California, Riverside
and North Carolina State University have demonstrated
that molecular memories are indeed both durable and
practical – a finding that could spur development
of the technology.
The scientists’ results, in a paper titled “Molecular
Memories that Survive Silicon Device Processing and
Real-World Operation,” are described in the Nov.
28 issue of the journal Science.
Dr. Jonathan S. Lindsey, Glaxo Distinguished University
Professor of Chemistry at NC State and one of the paper’s
authors, said the team was faced with a very basic problem.
“If molecular materials can’t compete against
semiconductor materials under the rigorous conditions
of the real world,” he said, “then trying
to implement them in electronic devices would be pointless.
Because our goal is to develop molecule-based memory
devices, we first had to test their durability and stability.”
Led by Dr. David F. Bocian, professor
of chemistry at the University of California, Riverside,
the team attached porphyrins – disk-shaped organic
molecules similar to chlorophyll – with specific
electronic properties to an electroactive surface, storing
information in the form of the molecules’ positive
charges.
After
a series of tests, the scientists found that the resulting
molecular memories were “extremely robust”
and offered clear advantages over traditional semiconductor-based
technology.
“The
porphyrin-based information-storage elements exhibit
charge-retention times that are long (minutes) compared
with those of the semiconductor elements in dynamic
random access devices (tens of milliseconds),”
the university chemists report in their paper.
In addition, their testing showed that
such molecule-based information-storage devices “meet
the processing and operating challenges required for
use in electronic devices.” In particular, they
proved that “these molecules are stable under
extremes of temperature (400°C) and large numbers
of read-write cycles (1 trillion).”
That demonstrated stability, they conclude,
“indicates that these molecular architectures
can be readily adapted to current semiconductor fabrication
technology and operated under the conditions required
for a practical device.”
By establishing the practicality of
molecular memories, says Lindsey, the findings should
help eliminate doubts about the role of organic materials
in electronic devices.
“There is a perception that organic
molecules are fragile,” Lindsey said. “The
critical question has been whether, given the high temperatures
and other stresses of production and use, any molecule-based
devices could meet functionality standards. I believe
our research has laid this question to rest, and demonstrated
that appropriately chosen molecules can readily function
in practical devices.”
That knowledge, he said, should speed
development of molecule-based electronics, which promise
smaller, faster and far more powerful computers and
other applications.
The research was funded by ZettaCore
Inc. and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) Moletronics Program. Bocian and Lindsey are
co-founders of ZettaCore and serve as consultants for
the company.
-mueller-
Note
to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.
“Molecular
Memories that Survive Silicon Device Processing and
Real-World Operation”
Authors: David F. Bocian, Zhiming Liu, Amir
A. Yasseri, University of California, Riverside; Jonathan
S. Lindsey, North Carolina State University.
Published: Nov. 28, 2003, in Science.
Abstract: If molecular components are
to be used as functional elements in place of the semiconductor-based
devices present in conventional micro-circuitry, they
must compete with semiconductors under the extreme conditions
required for processing and operating practical devices.
Herein, we demonstrate that porphyrin-based molecules
bound to Si (100), which exhibit redox behavior useful
for information storage, can meet this challenge. These
molecular media in an inert atmosphere are stable under
extremes of temperature (400° C) for extended periods
(approaching 1 hour) and do not degrade under large
numbers of read-write cycles (10¹²).
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