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Bonn,
10 August 2004. The Erwin Schrödinger Prize for
Interdisciplinary Research, awarded by the Helmholtz
Association of National Research Centres, will go
to a research team from the Institute of Nanotechnology
of the Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe this year. The
jury wishes to honour the team of physicists and chemists
in this way for its excellent interdisciplinary achievements
in the field of nanotechnology. Professor Walter Kröll,
President of the Helmholtz Association, will present
the award worth 50,000 euros to the research team
at the Helmholtz Annual General Assembly on 7 December
2004 in the Concert Noble in Brussels.
Two pioneer activities have
made the Karlsruhe team, Frank Hennrich, Ralph Krupke,
Marcel Mayor, and Heiko Weber, famous among fellow
specialists worldwide in recent years: they have developed
a long sought-after method for the separation of tiny
carbon tubes which play an important role in nanotechnology.
They have also succeeded in measuring the electric
current through individual organic molecules. Working
together systematically, the Karlsruhe team has solved
two fundamental problems which impact the entire domain
of nanotechnology. Their joint work will give rise
to a new form of nanoelectronics in the future, in
which tiny circuits measuring millionths of a millimetre
could be built. This kind of electronics on a very
small scale is predicted to play an important part
in computer and satellite technology and medical engineering.
It would make it possible to build tiny chips and
so to decisively improve computing performance on
this miniature scale. The carbon tubes of the Karlsruhe
researchers could then function as "wires",
and the organic molecules serve as a storage medium.
Small is beautiful
The Erwin Schrödinger Prize is awarded annually
as a distinction for outstanding scientific or technologically
innovative achievements in the interface areas between
different fields with the participation of Helmholtz
scientists. “The prize-winners this year have succeeded
in a unique way in working together across disciplines
and in combining the fields of chemistry and physics
within an innovative research area,” explains Prof.
Karin Mölling, who chaired the jury. “Where components
in physics are becoming smaller and smaller and molecules
in chemistry are becoming bigger and bigger, physics
and chemistry meet,” says the physicist and head of
the Institute of Medicinal Virology at the University
of Zurich. “Nanotechnology is situated at this interface:
here circuits are built on a molecular scale. It can't
get any smaller!”
“Macaroni” of carbon atoms
As early as 1991 Japanese researchers discovered that
carbon atoms can form tiny tubes whose walls are just
one atom thick. Since then, “nanotubes” have become
one of the most important research subjects of nanotechnology.
Particularly in molecular electronics, they were quickly
recognised as the basic building blocks of electronic
components. However, up until now there has been one
difficulty: production always results in a mixture
of two types of nanotubes with differing electric
properties. Depending on the arrangement of atoms
in the walls, the carbon macaroni either behave like
metals or like semiconductors. Only now has the work
of the Karlsruhe research team made it possible to
separate the semiconducting and metallic tubes from
each other in a solution and so to sort them. “In
an alternating electrical field with a frequency of
10 million Hertz, the metallic and the semiconducting
nano¬tubes drift in opposite directions and can
hence be separated. The non-metallic tubes stay in
the solution,” explains the physicist Dr. Ralph Krupke.
Together with the chemist Dr. Frank Hennrich, he was
able to solve the problem using a multidisciplinary
approach.
Going to the limits
For electric circuits on a nanoscale, further components
are needed in addition to tiny wires. Semiconductor
engineers in the past 20 years may have succeeded
in producing increasingly well-integrated electronic
circuits made of silicon, with the dimensions of individual
components becoming more and more minute. In the next
few years these components are likely to shrink to
as little as a few nanometres. Then, however, physical
limits will be reached.
The electronic connection of
molecules in a circuit apparently offers a way out.
For such molecular circuits individual molecules must
be contacted electrically. Additionally, molecules
are needed whose conduction mechanism is predictable.
The Karlsruhe researchers made a breakthrough here:
they succeeded in clamping individual molecules between
two electrodes and measuring the current through these
molecules. “As proof we produced and contacted symmetrical
and asymmetrical molecules,” explains Dr. Marcel Mayor,
who worked with Dr. Heiko Weber in an interdisciplinary
partnership of chemistry and physics. In this way,
the scientists gained an insight which was of decisive
importance to molecular electronics: through an appropriate
selection of the molecular structure, the electronic
properties of the “components” can actually be determined.
Admittedly, the idea of using individual molecules
as electronic components was not new. Here, however,
electronic transport processes in the molecules have
been measured and understood comprehensively for the
first time.
With its 15 research centres
and annual budget of approx. 2.2 billion euros the
Helmholtz Association is Germany’s largest research
institution. The 24,000 employees produce top-rate
scientific results in six research fields: Energy,
Earth and Environment, Health, Key Technologies, Structure
of Matter, Transport and Space. The Helmholtz Association
identifies and takes on the grand challenges of society,
science and the economy, in particular through the
investigation of highly complex systems.
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