China develops next-gen 2D chip with 1,000-fold growth speed

Chinese scientists are developing advanced 2D semiconductor materials with 1,000-fold growth speed, promising applications in optoelectronics such as LEDs, photodetectors and lasers, to overcome Moore's Law limitations.

Moore’s Law predicted a doubling of semiconductor capacity every two years, but as chip dimensions continue to shrink, physical limitations make further performance scaling increasingly difficult.

In a 2D semiconductor, its ability to conduct electricity can be altered by adding tiny amounts of other elements, a process called doping, which can result in n-type (negative) and p-type (positive) materials. While many n-type 2D semiconductors, such as molybdenum disulphide and molybdenum diselenide, exist, high-performance and stable p-type ones are rare.

“Transistors in a chip require both n-type and p-type materials to work in pairs. The lack of high-performance p-type materials has become a critical bottleneck for the development of sub-5-nm node 2D semiconductors, and it is also a fiercely contested scientific and technological frontier,” said Zhu Mengjian from the National University of Defence Technology in a report by Science and Technology Daily on Thursday.

The advanced material offers promise in optoelectronics, where it can be used in LEDs, photodetectors and lasers, supporting China’s push for next-gen ‘2D chips’ with 1,000-fold growth speed.

संबंधित लेख

A team from Nanjing University’s School of Integrated Circuits and Huawei has developed the first molybdenum disulfide-based multi-bit parallel microprocessor.

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A team led by Wu Zhenping at Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications has confirmed in Science Advances that kappa-gallium oxide exhibits stable ferroelectricity at room temperature, enabling it to store data like a memory device while serving as a high-power transmitter. This breakthrough could allow for smaller, more powerful military electronics in Chinese fighters, potentially leaving US F-22 radars two generations behind.

Researchers at the University of Science and Technology of China have developed the Jiuzhang 4.0 photonic quantum computing prototype, which manipulates 3,050 photons and sets a new record.

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