A Single Atom Transistor: The Ultimate Scaling Limit – Entry into Quantum Computing

By Gerhard Klimeck

Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

Published on

Abstract

50th European Solid-State Device Research Conference

Bio

Gerhard Klimeck is an Electrical and Computer Engineering faculty at Purdue University and leads two research centers in Purdue's Discovery Park. He helped to create nanoHUB.org which now serves over 1.5 million users globally. Previously he worked with Texas Instruments and NASA/JPL/Caltech. His research interest is in computational nanoelectronics, high performance computing, and data analytics. NEMO, the nanoelectronic modeling software built in his research group established the state-of-the-art in atomistic quantum transport modeling. NEMO is now being used at Intel for advanced transistor designs and commercialized. He published over 525 printed scientific articles that resulted in an h-index of 64 in Google scholar. He is a fellow of the Institute of Physics (IOP), a fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), and a Fellow of IEEE.

Sponsored by

Cite this work

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

  • Gerhard Klimeck (2020), "A Single Atom Transistor: The Ultimate Scaling Limit – Entry into Quantum Computing," https://nanohub.org/resources/34187.

    BibTex | EndNote

Location

ESSCIRC-ESSDERC Grenoble 2020

Tags