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Klaus von Klitzing Max-Planck-Institut fur ] Festk] orperforschung,
Heisenbergstrasse 1, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany Already many
Cassandras have prematurely announced the end of the silicon
roadmap and yet, conventional semiconductor-based transistors have
been continuously shrinking at a pace which has brought us to
nowadays cheap and powerful microelectronics. However it is clear
that the traditional scaling laws cannot be applied if unwanted
tunnel phenomena or ballistic transport dominate the device
properties. It is generally expected, that a combination of silicon
CMOS devices with molecular structure will dominate the ?eld of
nanoelectronics in 20 years. The visionary ideas of atomic- or
molecular-scale electronics already date back thirty years but only
recently advanced nanotechnology, including e.g. scanning tunneling
methods and mechanically controllable break junctions, have enabled
to make distinct progress in this direction. On the level of f-
damentalresearch, stateofthearttechniquesallowtomanipulate,
imageand
probechargetransportthroughuni-molecularsystemsinanincreasinglyc-
trolled way. Hence, molecular electronics is reaching a stage of
trustable and reproducible experiments. This has lead to a variety
of physical and chemical phenomena recently observed for charge
currents owing through molecular junctions, posing new challenges
to theory. As a result a still increasing n- ber of open questions
determines the future agenda in this ?eld."
Klaus von Klitzing Max-Planck-Institut fur ] Festk] orperforschung,
Heisenbergstrasse 1, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany Already many
Cassandras have prematurely announced the end of the silicon
roadmap and yet, conventional semiconductor-based transistors have
been continuously shrinking at a pace which has brought us to
nowadays cheap and powerful microelectronics. However it is clear
that the traditional scaling laws cannot be applied if unwanted
tunnel phenomena or ballistic transport dominate the device
properties. It is generally expected, that a combination of silicon
CMOS devices with molecular structure will dominate the ?eld of
nanoelectronics in 20 years. The visionary ideas of atomic- or
molecular-scale electronics already date back thirty years but only
recently advanced nanotechnology, including e.g. scanning tunneling
methods and mechanically controllable break junctions, have enabled
to make distinct progress in this direction. On the level of f-
damentalresearch, stateofthearttechniquesallowtomanipulate,
imageand
probechargetransportthroughuni-molecularsystemsinanincreasinglyc-
trolled way. Hence, molecular electronics is reaching a stage of
trustable and reproducible experiments. This has lead to a variety
of physical and chemical phenomena recently observed for charge
currents owing through molecular junctions, posing new challenges
to theory. As a result a still increasing n- ber of open questions
determines the future agenda in this ?eld."
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