Tags: molecular electronics

Description

In 1959, physicist Richard Feynman presented an amazing talk entitled There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom, in which he proposed making very small circuits out of molecules. More than forty years later, people are starting to realize his vision. Thanks to Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) probes and "self-assembly" fabrication techniques, it is now possible to connect electrodes to a molecule and measure its conductance. In 2004, Mark Hersam et al. reported the first experimental measurement of a molecular resonant tunneling device on silicon. This new field of Molecular Electronics may someday provide the means to miniaturize circuits beyond the limits of silicon, keeping Moore's Law in force for many years to come.

Learn more about molecular electronics from the resources on this site, listed below. More information on Molecular electronics can be found here.

Tools (1-5 of 5)

  1. Northwestern University Initiative for Teaching Nanoscience

    Tools | 12 Aug 2008 | Contributor(s):: Baudilio Tejerina

    This package allows users to study and analyze of molecular properties using various electronic structure methods.

  2. Theoretical Electron Density Visualizer

    Tools | 01 Jul 2008 | Contributor(s):: Baudilio Tejerina

    TEDVis calculates and displays 3D maps of molecular ED and its derivatives from the wave function.

  3. UV/Vis Spectra simulator

    Tools | 04 Mar 2008 | Contributor(s):: Baudilio Tejerina

    This tool computes molecular electronic spectra.

  4. CNDO/INDO

    Tools | 09 Oct 2007 | Contributor(s):: Baudilio Tejerina, Jeff Reimers

    Semi-empirical Molecular Orbital calculations.

  5. MolCToy

    Tools | 08 Jun 2005 | Contributor(s):: Magnus Paulsson, Ferdows Zahid, Supriyo Datta, Michael McLennan

    Computes current-voltage (I-V) characteristics and conductance spectrum (G-V) of a molecule sandwiched between two metallic contacts