World’s thinnest electronic device is 2 atoms thick

Scientists have developed the world’s thinnest piece of technology, a tiny device only two atoms thick that can be used to store electronic information.

The device consists of two layers, one made up of boron and the other of nitrogen, arranged in a repeating hexagonal structure. By taking advantage of a strange quantum mechanical effect called quantum tunneling, electrons from the boron and nitrogen atoms are able to zip across the gap between the two layers, changing the state of the device and allowing it to encode digital information.

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