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Volume 3 Issue 7, July 2008

Two main challenges must be overcome before nanoscale electronic devices can be made on a large scale precise engineering of the building blocks, and assembly of these building blocks into working circuits. In attempts to achieve these goals, graphene has emerged as an attractive alternative to nanotubes, nanowires and other approaches to nanoscale electronics. Now, Levente Tapaszt and co-workers have made graphene nanoribbons with welldefined widths and crystallographic orientations using scanning tunnelling microscope lithography. The nanometre precision offered by this technique makes it possible to engineer the electronic properties of the nanoribbons in a way that could ultimately lead to ballistic electronic devices operating at room temperature. The cover image shows a 30 junction in an 8-nm-wide nanoribbon (the yellow region between the two red lines).

Cover design by Karen Moore

Letter p397

Editorial

  • Scientific meetings and conferences come in all shapes and size, and love them or loathe them, they have an important role to play in all areas of science.

    Editorial

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Thesis

  • It is difficult to be definitive about certain aspects of nanotechnology, especially the use of nanoparticles in medical applications. Chris Toumey looks at two views.

    • Chris Toumey
    Thesis
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Research Highlights

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News & Views

  • Hybrid devices that rely on the movement of both electrons and ions might one day challenge conventional silicon electronics by exploiting both classical and quantum electron transport.

    • Victor V. Zhirnov
    • Ralph K. Cavin
    News & Views
  • Direct injection of long multiwalled carbon nanotubes into the abdominal cavity of mice produces asbestos-like pathogenic behaviour. What does this finding mean for nanotube safety?

    • Agnes B. Kane
    • Robert H. Hurt
    News & Views
  • A stencilling technique for depositing arrays of nanoscale ferroelectric capacitors on a surface could be useful in data storage devices.

    • J. Marty Gregg
    News & Views
  • Electron interferometry can be used to measure strain with nanoscale resolution in electronic devices by exploiting a simple idea found in physics textbooks.

    • Abbas Ourmazd
    News & Views
  • The performance of metal electrodes used for studying brain function and relieving the symptoms of medical conditions can be significantly improved by coating them with carbon nanotubes.

    • Vladimir Parpura
    News & Views
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Review Article

  • Single-walled carbon nanotubes tend to be produced in polydisperse mixtures with different lengths, diameters and electronic properties. This review article surveys the various techniques that have been developed for producing monodisperse samples from these mixtures. Selective growth techniques are also covered.

    • Mark C. Hersam
    Review Article
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Letter

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Article

  • Nanoscale metal/oxide/metal devices that are capable of fast non-volatile switching have been built from platinum and titanium dioxide. The devices could have applications in ultrahigh density memory cells and novel forms of computing.

    • J. Joshua Yang
    • Matthew D. Pickett
    • R. Stanley Williams
    Article
  • Coating conventional tungsten and stainless steel electrodes with carbon nanotubes improves their performance in research involving the implantation of electrical devices into the nervous system. The results could have an impact on electrophysiology and the development of brain–machine interfaces.

    • Edward W. Keefer
    • Barry R. Botterman
    • Guenter W. Gross
    Article
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