Deep inside computer chips, tiny wires made of gold and other conductive metals carry the electricity used to process data.
But as these interconnected circuits shrink to nanoscale, engineers worry that pressure, such as that caused by thermal expansion when current flows through these wires, might cause gold to behave more like a liquid than a solid, making nanoelectronics unreliable. That, in turn, could force chip designers to hunt for new materials to make these critical wires.
But according to a new paper in Physical Review Letters, chip designers can rest easy. "Gold still behaves like a solid at these small scales," says Stanford mechanical engineer Wendy Gu, who led a team that figured out how to pressurize gold particles just 4 nanometers in length -- the smallest particles ever measured -- to assess whether current flows might cause the metal's atomic structure to collapse.
To conduct the experiment, Gu's team first had to devise a way put tiny gold particles under extreme pressure, while simultaneously measuring how much that pressure damaged gold's atomic structure.
To solve the first problem, they turned to the field of high-pressure physics to borrow a device known as a diamond anvil cell. As the name implies, both hammer and anvil are diamonds that are used to compress the gold. As Gu explained, a nanoparticle of gold is built like a skyscraper with atoms forming a crystalline lattice of neat rows and columns. She knew that pressure from the anvil would dislodge some atoms from the crystal and create tiny defects in the gold.
The next challenge was to detect these defects in nanoscale gold. The scientists shined X-rays through the diamond onto the gold. Defects in the crystal caused the X-rays to reflect at different angles than they would on uncompressed gold. By measuring variations in the angles at which the X-rays bounced off the particles before and after pressure was applied, the team was able to tell whether the particles retained the deformations or reverted to their original state when pressure was lifted.
"The defects remain after pressure was removed, which told us that gold behaves like a solid even at such scales," Gu said.
In practical terms, her findings mean that chipmakers can know with certainty that they'll be able to design stable nanodevices using gold -- a material they have known and trusted for decades -- for years to come.
"For the foreseeable future, gold's luster will not fade," Gu says.
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Other authors include Stanford graduate students Abhinav Parakh, Mehrdad T. Kiani, and David Doan; Sangryun Lee and Seunghwa Ryu of Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology; and K. Anika Harkins and Lindsey A. Hanson of Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut.
Journal
Physical Review Letters