Latest Updates
-
Purported Video of Muslim Mob Lynching & Hanging Hindu Youth In Bangladesh Shocks Internet -
A Hotel on Wheels: Bihar Rolls Out Its First Luxury Caravan Buses -
Bharti Singh-Haarsh Limbachiyaa Welcome Second Child, Gender: Couple Welcome Their Second Baby, Duo Overjoyed - Report | Bharti Singh Gives Birth To Second Baby Boy | Gender Of Bharti Singh Haarsh Limbachiyaa Second Baby -
Bharti Singh Welcomes Second Son: Joyous News for the Comedian and Her Family -
Gold & Silver Rates Today in India: 22K, 24K, 18K & MCX Prices Fall After Continuous Rally; Check Latest Gold Rates in Chennai, Mumbai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad & Other Cities on 19 December -
Nick Jonas Dancing to Dhurandhar’s “Shararat” Song Goes Viral -
From Consciousness To Cosmos: Understanding Reality Through The Vedic Lens -
The Sunscreen Confusion: Expert Explains How to Choose What Actually Works in Indian Weather -
On Goa Liberation Day 2025, A Look At How Freedom Shaped Goa Into A Celebrity-Favourite Retreat -
Daily Horoscope, Dec 19, 2025: Libra to Pisces; Astrological Prediction for all Zodiac Signs
Self-Assembling Computers Technology At Its Best

A team of European s has developed a unique computer circuit that can build itself - a development that can lead to self-assembling computers.
The s have developed an integrated circuit that can build itself. The work is an important step towards its ultimate goal - a self-assembling computer. The work appears in this week's Nature1.
Currently, computer chips are made by etching patterns onto semiconducting wafers using a combination of light and photosensitive chemicals.
In the new study, the scientists took a long organic molecule with mobile electrons, called quinquethiophene that acts like a semiconductor and attached it to a long carbon chain with a silicon group at the end, which acts as an anchor.
They later soaked the circuit board with preprinted electrodes into a solution of their new molecules.
The experiment showed that the molecules got attached to an insulating layer between the electrodes, forming bridges from one electrode to the next.
"We dump it in a beaker with a solution of the molecules, we take it out, we wash it, and it works," Nature quoted Dago de Leeuw researcher at Philips Research Laboratories in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, as saying.
"The nicest example is DNA," he said.
"Our genetic code provides a set of instructions that can be used to marshal molecules into an entire person, and researchers would like to come up with a similar set of compounds able to organize each other into circuits," he added.
De Leeuw said that the circuit is truly self-assembling.
"The different molecules are like little bricks," said Edsger Smits, another researcher at Philips.
"Frankly it worked much better than we expected," he added.
Hagen Klauk, an electrical engineer at the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in Stuttgart, Germany found the new technique impressive but said that it still needs improvements. He also said that the movement of electrons through the circuit would make for a very slow computer.
Klauk hopes that improving the characteristics of the molecules and tweaking the technique will eventually lead to self-assembling circuits that out-perform existing technologies, which use thick films of organic molecules.
"Self-assembly and nanotechnology is certainly cool, but the one thing missing is higher performance," he added.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications











