AI discovers new nanostructures

AI discovers new nanostructures

a year ago
Anonymous $V1JIPM4sUP

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/01/230113145356.htm

The newly discovered structures were formed by a process called self-assembly, in which a material's molecules organize themselves into unique patterns. Scientists at Brookhaven's Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) are experts at directing the self-assembly process, creating templates for materials to form desirable arrangements for applications in microelectronics, catalysis, and more. Their discovery of the nanoscale ladder and other new structures further widens the scope of self-assembly's applications.

"Self-assembly can be used as a technique for nanopatterning, which is a driver for advances in microelectronics and computer hardware," said CFN scientist and co-author Gregory Doerk. "These technologies are always pushing for higher resolution using smaller nanopatterns. You can get really small and tightly controlled features from self-assembling materials, but they do not necessarily obey the kind of rules that we lay out for circuits, for example. By directing self-assembly using a template, we can form patterns that are more useful."