Brookhaven National Laboratory: Making 3-D Nanosuperconductors With DNA
November 11, 2020
November 11, 2020
UPTON, New York, Nov. 11 -- The U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory issued the following news release:
Three-dimensional (3-D) nanostructured materials--those with complex shapes at a size scale of billionths of a meter--that can conduct electricity without resistance could be used in a range of quantum devices. For example, such 3-D superconducting nanostructures could find application in signal amplifiers to enhance the speed and accuracy of quantum computer . . .
Three-dimensional (3-D) nanostructured materials--those with complex shapes at a size scale of billionths of a meter--that can conduct electricity without resistance could be used in a range of quantum devices. For example, such 3-D superconducting nanostructures could find application in signal amplifiers to enhance the speed and accuracy of quantum computer . . .