The stimulus of the successful semiconductor device miniaturisation programmes coupled to recent progress in synthetic chemistry and molecular engineering has led to the emergence of a new inter‐disciplinary activity—molecular electronics—which holds long‐term promise for a new range of electronic materials and devices. From very speculative origins the field has begun to generate important applications based on photoresists, Langmuir‐Blodgett films, electroactive polymers and photochromic materials. A selection of topics ranging from molecular switches, memories, sensors, and the biological interface to prospects for a molecular computer are discussed with special emphasis on features such as stability, self‐organisation and self‐assembly which are unique to molecular systems.
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Review Article|
March 01 1987
Prospects for Molecular Electronics
J.R. Barker
J.R. Barker
Department of Electronics and Electrical Engineering, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2977-7062
Print ISSN: 0265-3028
© MCB UP Limited
1987
Hybrid Circuits (1987) 4 (3): 19–24.
Citation
Barker J (1987), "Prospects for Molecular Electronics". Hybrid Circuits, Vol. 4 No. 3 pp. 19–24, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb044287
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