
"A group of researchers has fabricated
a single-atom transistor by introducing one phosphorous atom into a silicon lattice. Through the use of a scanning tunnelling microscope and hydrogen-resist lithography, Martin Fuechsle et al. placed the phosphorous atom precisely between very thin silicon leads, allowing them to measure its electrical behavior. The results show clearly that we can read both the quantum transitions within the phosphorous atom and its transistor behavior. No smaller solid-state devices are possible, so systems of this type reveal the limit of Moore's law - the prediction about the miniaturization of technology - while pointing toward solid-state quantum computing devices."
Member since:
2010-03-08
This is not necessarily a problem for some applications though, as long as they manage to pack a lot of stuff in that big box.
Case in point : the other day, I've heard about a breakthrough in quantum computers based on trapped ions. By using the near field of regular microwave antennas instead of stabilized lasers for cooling, they managed to pack ten times as much ions on a chip as they did before.
Now if they manage to have tons of qubits per chip and tons of chips per cryogenic vacuum chamber, they might get something that is worthwhile for HPC...
Edited 2012-02-21 15:03 UTC