The book explores how chemical systems can be used for information processing as traditional silicon-based electronics approach their physical limits.
Discusses carbon nanostructures, low-dimensional metals, and semiconductors. Infochemistry: Information Processing at the Na...
Covers the basics of digital, ternary, and quantum logic. The book explores how chemical systems can be
(e.g., AND/OR gates made of molecules) Bio-inspired computing (e.g., mimicking neural networks) Chemical sensing (e.g., detecting ions through logic) Infochemistry: Information Processing at the Nanoscale and quantum logic. (e.g.
If you tell me what specific part of infochemistry you're researching: