Nanoelectronics
G. Allan (IEMN), C. Delerue (IEMN), C. Krzeminski (IEMN), M. Lannoo, (L2MP)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the transition from microelectronics to nanoelectronics, exploring physical limits, new materials, and molecular electronics as promising avenues for future device miniaturization beyond traditional semiconductor technology.
Contribution
It provides an overview of the physical and economic limits of miniaturization and introduces recent advances in inorganic nanodevices and molecular electronics for future nanoelectronic applications.
Findings
Physical and economic limits of miniaturization identified
Examples of nanometric size device realizations discussed
Potential of molecular electronics for future nanoelectronics highlighted
Abstract
In this chapter we intend to discuss the major trends in the evolution of microelectronics and its eventual transition to nanoelectronics. As it is well known, there is a continuous exponential tendency of microelectronics towards miniaturization summarized in G. Moore's empirical law. There is consensus that the corresponding decrease in size must end in 10 to 15 years due to physical as well as economical limits. It is thus necessary to prepare new solutions if one wants to pursue this trend further. One approach is to start from the ultimate limit, i.e. the atomic level, and design new materials and components which will replace the present day MOS (metal-oxide-semi- conductor) based technology. This is exactly the essence of nanotechnology, i.e. the ability to work at the molecular level, atom by atom or molecule by molecule, to create larger structures with fundamentally new…
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