HomeNewsIndia NewsElectronics at the nanoscale: Challenges and Opportunities for making metal nanowires

    Electronics at the nanoscale: Challenges and Opportunities for making metal nanowires

    Silver, gold and copper nanowires are leading contenders for next-generation nanoscale devices, however greater understanding of how they work and improved production methods are needed before they can be widely used, explains a recent review in the journal Science and Technology of Advanced Materials.

    “Metal nanowires are used for numerous applications, but our understanding of their mechanical properties remains elusive,” says Nurul Akmal Che Lah, engineer at Universiti Malaysia Pahang.

    Lah and colleague Sonia Trigueros at the University of Oxford reviewed methods for synthesising and analysing silver, gold and copper nanowires for molecular-based electronics.

    Molecular electronics uses single molecules, or nanoscale collections of molecules, to create electronic components too small to be seen with the naked eye. For example, molecular wires are one-dimensional chains of single metal atoms which conduct electric current. Molecular electronic devices can be used for a wide range of applications from storage media to catalysts and clinical treatments.

    Nanomaterials have different properties from their bulk counterparts. Coinage metals in particular — silver, gold, copper and nickel — have attracted special attention because of their unique physical properties.

    Recent advances in experimental techniques have allowed scientists to probe the mechanical properties of nanowires. High precision micromechanical testing devices, such as electron microscopes, scanning force microscopes and X-ray diffraction, can be used to assess crystalline structure, stress-strain relationships, atom-by-atom chemical composition, as well as electronic properties. These methods have revealed that the nanomechanical properties of nanowires are influenced by nanowire structure, surface stress and defect formation.

    The researchers investigated recent developments in the synthesis and analysis of metal nanowires. Hydro-solvothermal synthesis, in which metallic structures are grown within a solution, is a relatively simple and inexpensive process. Compared with other methods that require a template or high pressures, hydro-solvothermal synthesis is best suited to industrial application as it doesn’t require complex post-processing treatments.

    However, synthesis methods must be improved to control the initial size, final size and morphology of the nanowires and produce high yields, whilst also being inexpensive and environmentally friendly. More work needs to be done to further optimise and improve the mechanical properties of coinage nanowires in order to harness their full potential, the researchers conclude.

    ELE Times Research Desk
    ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    Related News

    Must Read

    Keysight to Demonstrate NR-NTN devices Mobility Testing at MWC 2026 in Collaboration with Samsung

    Keysight Technologies, Inc. will demonstrate lab-based validation of new...

    ROHM Strengthens Supply Capability for GaN Power Devices

    Combining TSMC’s Process Technology to Build an End-to-End, In-Group...

    element14 Community launches smart security and surveillance design challenge

    element14, an Avnet Community, in collaboration with ADI, has...

    R & S and LITEON demonstrate high‑throughput 5G femtocell testing with the PVT360A

    Rohde & Schwarz and LITEON collaborate to showcase a...

    Infineon presents MCU and sensor solutions for the future of AI, IoT, mobility, and robotics

    Next-generation embedded systems are essential for applications in the...

    R&S advances AI-RAN testing using digital twins in collaboration with NVIDIA

    Rohde & Schwarz will showcase a new milestone in...

    Top Seven Tech Trends in the semiconductor sector for 2026

    By: STMicroelectronics In 2026, a new class of intelligent machines...