Graphene interconnects could help keep pace with Moore’s Law
Raghunath Murali (left) and graduate student Kevin Brenner are shown with a test station used to study the properties of graphene. Pic credit: Georgia Tech/Gary Meek
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Article Summary
Graphene, the one-atom-thick gauze of carbon atoms resembling chicken wire first isolated in 2004, continues to find new and wondrous applications. It has already been used to create the world’s smallest transistor and now researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have experimentally demonstrated the potential for graphene to replace copper for interconnects in future generations of integrated circuits.
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John Wassner
- November 27, 2009 @ 01:40 UTC