Electronics: Building Chips in 3-D Dr. Krishna Saraswat, Electronic 
Engineering; Dr. Chris Chidsey, Chemistry








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"Whether nanotechnology had ever showed up or not, electronics would have gotten 
there anyway," says Professor Saraswat. For the past four decades, the number of 
transistors that can be put on a chip, or equivalently, the number of information 
processing events that can be done per chip, has doubled every twenty-two months; 
concomitantly, the cost per processing event has dropped. Following this trend called 
Moore's Law, microelectronics has steadily settled into nanoelectronics in the past 
decade.
Courtesy of Steve Block Volume II, Issue 2 17 Sizing Up Nanotechnology Block, is that 
"if we are ever to build machines which are in any way based on biological 
structures, then we will have to learn about how real biological systems function."


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