Thursday, February 05, 2015

drag2share: Scientists build silicon transistor just one atom thick

source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/02/05/scientists-build-silicon-transistor-just-one-atom-thick/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

Silicene

Step aside, graphene, "silicene" is the trendy new nano-material in town that could one day supercharge future tech. Scientists have created the world's first transistor out of the silicon-based material, and it's a mere one atom thick. Unlike its much-maligned graphene cousin -- which has yet lived up to its vast potential -- silicene is a much more interesting material for computer scientists. Thanks to the silicon base, it can form "band gaps" necessary for transistors, which could one day lead to faster chips that consume less power.

The feat came as a surprise to many observers, despite the fact that the "chip" only lasted a few minutes to due its instability. Up until recently, silicene was only a theoretical material and nobody expected a transistor to be built from it anytime soon. But the team succeeded by condensing an atom-thick layer onto a block of silver in a vacuum, then sealing it with alumina. Afterwards, they peeled away the silicene material from the silver block, leaving thin layers of silver and aluminum as protection. Scratching away portions of the silver resulted in a rudimentary, but functional transistor.

Up until recently, silicene was only a theoretical material and nobody expected a transistor to be built from it anytime soon.

The scientists plan to hone the process to create longer-lasting, functional chips in the near term. However, there's still some serious barriers, given the instability of silicene in the real world and difficulty in working with it. But as one scientists said, "The major breakthrough here is the efficient low-temperature manufacturing and fabrication of silicene devices for the first time." That's still quite a feat, but whether it leads to useful gadgets or not is a wide open question.

[Image credit: Argonne National Laboratory/Flickr]

Read More...

Here is every state's favorite word to use in online dating

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/here-is-every-states-favorite-word-to-use-in-online-dating-2015-2

your states favorite word to use in online dating 1417538846.78 8681423

Image created by @IdeasFisherman.

SEE ALSO: Man misses once-in-a-lifetime moment because he's too busy texting

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This Flying Car Is Real And It Can Fly 430 Miles On A Full Tank








Read More...

How all Apple patents connect to Steve Jobs visualized

Source: http://sploid.gizmodo.com/visualization-shows-how-almost-all-apple-patents-connec-1683782594

How all Apple patents connect to Steve Jobs visualized

Like a game of Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, these interactive maps show the relationship between all the inventors listed in Apple's patents and its Wizard of Oz: Steve Jobs—the big red dot. He's connected to almost every patent and team, from industrial design to hardware to user interfaces to music to security.

Read more...

Read More...

New Iron-Aluminum Alloy Is Strong and Light as Titanium, 10% of the Cost

Source: http://gizmodo.com/new-iron-aluminum-alloy-is-strong-and-light-as-titanium-1683920338

New Iron-Aluminum Alloy Is Strong and Light as Titanium, 10% of the Cost

The best materials are, by and large, the most expensive: carbon fiber, diamond and scandium all have properties to lust for, but an eye-watering price tag to match. Now, material scientists have tweaked an iron-aluminum alloy at the nano-scale to make a material that's as strong and light as titanium, another expensive material, but just a tenth of the cost.

Read more...

Read More...

drag2share: This Is What Wikipedia Looks Like Imagined as a Galaxy

source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/vip/~3/Hbr5D2nF5Bw/this-is-what-wikipedia-looks-like-imagined-as-a-galaxy-1683921800

This Is What Wikipedia Looks Like Imagined as a Galaxy

It may look like some kind of holographic AI, but this is actually Wikipedia's 100,000 most popular articles in 2014, mapped out as a galaxy.

Read More...