The discovery paves the way for microelectronic devices that are faster and capable of handling more power, and could also lead to more efficient solar panels.
Using metamaterials, engineers at the University of California San Diego in the US were able to build a microscale device that shows a 1,000 per cent increase in conductivity when activated by low voltage and a low power laser.
The capabilities of existing microelectronic devices, such as transistors, are ultimately limited by the properties of their constituent materials, such as their semiconductors, researchers said.
Electron velocity is limited, since electrons are constantly colliding with atoms as they flow through the semiconductor.
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A team of researchers led by Dan Sievenpiper at UC San Diego sought to remove these roadblocks to conductivity by replacing semiconductors with free electrons in space.
"And we wanted to do this at the microscale," said Ebrahim Forati, a former postdoctoral researcher in Sievenpiper's lab and first author of the study.
To address this challenge, Sievenpiper's team fabricated a microscale device that can release electrons from a material without such extreme requirements.
The device consists of an engineered surface, called a metasurface, on top of a silicon wafer, with a layer of silicon dioxide in between.
The metasurface consists of an array of gold mushroom-like nanostructures on an array of parallel gold strips.
Tests on the device showed a 1,000 per cent change in conductivity.
"That means more available electrons for manipulation," Ebrahim said.
The research was published in the journal Nature Communications.
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