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Single molecule devices push past silicon limits
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Single molecule devices push past silicon limits

by Riko Seibo
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Feb 06, 2026
As conventional silicon chips approach fundamental scaling limits, researchers are intensifying efforts to build electronic components from individual molecules that harness quantum effects instead of classical charge transport. Molecular electronics aims to use carefully designed molecules as switches, diodes and even transistors, enabling ultra-dense and ultra-low-power circuits that move far beyond current semiconductor technologies.

For more than fifty years, the electronics industry has relied on steadily shrinking silicon transistors to deliver faster, cheaper and more capable devices. At nanometer dimensions, however, quantum phenomena start to disrupt the predictable behavior of traditional devices, while fabrication complexity and cost continue to rise sharply. In response, scientists have turned to molecular-scale components whose electronic properties can be tuned by chemical structure rather than lithographic patterning, but early demonstrations suffered from instability, poor reproducibility and limited prospects for large-scale integration.

A 2025 review in the journal Microsystems and Nanoengineering, titled "Molecular electronic devices based on atomic manufacturing methods" (DOI: 10.1038/s41378-025-01037-8), surveys how atomic-level fabrication techniques are reshaping the field and overcoming many of these obstacles. The authors from Xiamen University describe how advances in device construction, interface control and measurement methodology are transforming single-molecule devices from fragile laboratory curiosities into more robust building blocks for future circuit architectures.

At the heart of this research is the molecular junction, a configuration in which a single molecule forms a conductive bridge between two electrodes. In such junctions, electrons do not flow like a conventional current but instead move by quantum tunneling, allowing the molecule to behave as a functional element that can switch, rectify or modulate signals. Realizing these properties in a controlled and repeatable way requires precise control over both the molecular structure and the way it is contacted by the electrodes.

The review explains how new fabrication strategies have improved the stability and reliability of molecular junctions. Static junctions based on carefully engineered nanogaps or self-assembled monolayers provide fixed molecular bridges with enhanced mechanical robustness, while still allowing fine adjustment of the electronic coupling. Complementary dynamic techniques repeatedly form and break molecular contacts, generating large statistical data sets that distinguish intrinsic molecular behavior from artifacts and experimental noise.

Materials beyond traditional metals are also playing a growing role in molecular electronics. Researchers are increasingly turning to carbon-based electrodes such as graphene and carbon nanotubes, which can reduce spurious interactions and offer more controllable molecule-electrode coupling. In parallel, DNA-based positioning methods are emerging as powerful tools for arranging molecules and nanoparticles with near-atomic precision, opening a path to ordered arrays and more complex device geometries built from the bottom up.

According to the review, these technical advances mean that molecular devices are no longer limited to proving that single-molecule functions are possible. The latest junctions can be engineered to respond in predictable ways to external stimuli including light, electric fields, redox conditions and mechanical forces, making it feasible to design specific functions into the molecular backbone. This level of control is essential if single-molecule components are to perform logic operations, store information or act as sensitive detectors in practical systems.

The authors argue that the central question for the field is shifting from whether molecular devices can operate at all to how they can be made to operate reliably and consistently across many junctions. Improved control of interfaces, along with better-defined fabrication conditions, has substantially narrowed device-to-device performance variations that once obscured underlying physics. As a result, the dominant barriers now lie in engineering and system integration rather than in fundamental limitations of molecular transport.

If current trends continue, the review suggests that molecular electronics could enable new generations of computing, memory and sensing systems with unprecedented density and energy efficiency. Single-molecule devices promise extremely low power consumption and a footprint far smaller than even the most advanced silicon transistors, aligning well with the needs of neuromorphic architectures and other emerging computing paradigms. Molecular junctions with tailored chemical functionality could also form the basis of sensors capable of detecting individual chemical or biological species.

Looking ahead, the authors highlight three-dimensional integration as a likely requirement for turning isolated molecular devices into usable circuits. Techniques already being introduced in advanced semiconductor packaging may be adapted to stack and interconnect molecular layers, combining atomic-scale precision with established micro- and nanofabrication platforms. While widespread deployment of molecular electronics remains a long-term goal, the convergence of chemistry, physics and engineering described in the review positions single-molecule devices as a credible pathway beyond the limits of silicon scaling.

Research Report:Molecular electronic devices based on atomic manufacturing methods

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