In a pioneering breakthrough, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have successfully crafted the world’s inaugural functional semiconductor made from graphene, a single sheet of carbon atoms bound together by the strongest known bonds. Published in Nature, the research signals a promising avenue for the future of electronics, particularly as silicon, the predominant material in contemporary electronics, approaches its limits in the face of escalating computing speeds and diminishing device sizes.
Leading the charge is Walter de Heer, Regents’ Professor of physics at Georgia Tech, who spearheaded a team based in Atlanta, Georgia, and Tianjin, China. The team’s achievement centers on creating a graphene semiconductor compatible with conventional microelectronics processing methods—a critical requirement for a viable alternative to silicon.
Continue reading… “Groundbreaking Achievement: Georgia Tech Researchers Develop First Graphene Semiconductor”
