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Carbon Nanotubes and MoS2: A New Twist on Ternary Circuits
Friday, January 17, 2025
Now, researchers have found a way to fix this using carbon nanotubes and a material called MoS2. They made tiny switches, called ternary inverters, that can swing almost all the way from one end to the other (like a pendulum) and have three clear logic states. They did this by printing carbon nanotubes onto MoS2 layers using a method called inkjet printing, which is easy to scale up.
These switches work by adjusting the width of the NTC region, which allows for a stable middle logic state over a wide range of input voltages. This is a big step forward for making MVL systems work well in real-life circuits.
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