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China's new 2D transistor could soon be used to make the world's fastest processors
Advances in materials and architecture could lead to silicon-free chip manufacturing thanks to a new type of transistor.
Duke engineers show how a common device architecture used to test 2D transistors overstates their performance prospects in real-world devices.
Chinese scientists unveil the world’s smallest ferroelectric transistor with ultralow power and tiny gate for future AI chips ...
Breakthrough said to overcome long-standing limitations of traditional ferroelectric transistors, ‘paving way for large-scale application’.
Lab architecture used to test 2D semiconductors artificially boosts performance metrics, making it harder to assess whether these materials can truly replace silicon.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Atom-thin ferroelectric transistor can store 3,024 polarization states
Over the past few decades, electronics engineers have been trying to develop new neuromorphic hardware, systems that mirror the organization of neurons in the human brain. These systems could run ...
A huge portion of electronic devices that are discarded at the end of their lives are never recycled, and a big part of the problem is the difficulty in separating out and recovering the valuable ...
By applying voltage to electrically control a new "transistor" membrane, researchers at Lawrence Livermore National ...
75 years ago this month, research scientists working at Bell Labs first created, then unveiled to the world a new device—the point contact transistor. Some call it the greatest invention of the 20th ...
The U.S. power transistor market was valued at USD 3.10 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 6.43 billion by 2035, expanding at a CAGR of 9.55%. Growth is fueled by rising EV adoption driving ...
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