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A groundbreaking development in electronics has emerged from the S. N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, led by Dr. Atindra Nath Pal and Biswajit Pabi. Their team has created a unique type of transistor that operates using single molecules rather than traditional electrical signals. This advancement, which leverages mechanical forces for control, could significantly impact fields such as quantum information processing, ultra-compact electronics, and advanced sensing technologies.

Mechanically Controllable Break Junction Technique

The researchers utilised a method known as mechanically controllable break junction (MCBJ) to develop this innovative transistor. By employing a piezoelectric stack, they precisely broke a macroscopic metal wire, creating a sub-nanometre gap designed to accommodate a single ferrocene molecule. Ferrocene, consisting of an iron atom encased between two cyclopentadienyl (Cp) rings, exhibits distinct electrical behaviour when subjected to mechanical forces. This technique underscores the potential of mechanical gating to regulate electron flow at the molecular level.

Impact of Molecular Orientation on Device Performance

Dr. Atindra Nath Pal and Biswajit Pabi, alongside their research team, discovered that the transistor’s performance is highly sensitive to the orientation of the ferrocene molecules between silver electrodes. The alignment of these molecules can either enhance or reduce the electrical conductivity through the junction. This finding highlights the critical importance of molecular geometry in designing and optimising transistor performance.

Potential for Low-Power Molecular Devices

Additional research involving gold electrodes and ferrocene at room temperature revealed an unexpectedly low resistance of approximately 12.9 kilohm, which is about five times the quantum of resistance. This resistance is significantly lower than the typical resistance of a molecular junction, around 1 megaohm.

This suggests that such devices could be used to create low-power molecular electronics, offering promising prospects for future innovations in low-power technology, quantum information processing, and advanced sensing applications.

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Planets Could Create Their Own Water While Forming, Expanding Possibilities for Habitable Worlds

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Lab experiments show planets can generate water during formation, not just via comets. This suggests habitable conditions may be widespread in the galaxy, expanding possibilities for life-friendly exoplanets.

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NASA’s ESCAPADE Mission Will Send Twin Probes to Uncover Mars’s Atmospheric Secrets

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NASA’s ESCAPADE mission will launch twin mini-satellites, Blue and Gold, to Mars aboard Blue Origin’s New Glenn. The probes will study how solar wind stripped away Mars’s atmosphere and water, helping scientists understand the Red Planet’s lost climate and its transformation into the dry world we see today.

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Webb Finds Phosphorus-Bearing Gas in an Ancient Brown Dwarf

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NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has detected phosphine (PH₃) in the atmosphere of the ancient brown dwarf Wolf 1130C, about 54 light-years away in Cygnus. This marks the first confirmed detection of a phosphorus-bearing gas in such a metal-poor object. The finding surprises astronomers, as phosphine was previously undetected in similar brown dwarfs, challenging …

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