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This is not a joke: scientists replaced silicon with metal from a first aid kit

Less Than 1 nm: What Comes After Silicon? Processors, memory, sensors — all of it relies on one element. Silicon. It is the foundation of all modern microchips and most electronics. Entire valleys are named after it. But what if I told you scientists have achieved the impossible — they c

This is not a joke: scientists replaced silicon with metal from a first aid kit

Less Than 1 nm: What Comes After Silicon?

Processors, memory, sensors — all of it relies on one element. Silicon. It is the foundation of all modern microchips and most electronics.

Entire valleys are named after it. But what if I told you scientists have achieved the impossible — they created a chip entirely without silicon? Imagine a processor made not of traditional semiconductors, but of a material found in colorful antacid tablets.

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Yes, we’re talking about bismuth. It sounds insane, but it’s real: Chinese researchers have developed a chip that works at the atomic level — where silicon fails. It’s more compact, faster, and more efficient — potentially the first nail in the coffin of the silicon era.

Why Replace Silicon?

Modern microchips have become too small. Today’s processors contain billions of transistors — tiny switches that must clearly distinguish signals. But as they shrink, quantum tunneling becomes an issue — electrons “cheat” and sneak through closed gates.

This causes current leakage, overheating, system failures, and ultimately breaks digital logic. Around the 5 nm threshold, transistors start to lose reliability. Silicon has reached a physical limit: its atoms measure about 0.54 nm — and making anything smaller just doesn’t work.

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Meet Bismuth

The 83rd element in the periodic table, bismuth is a heavy metal with a silvery-pink sheen. Commonly found in stomach medication thanks to its protective and antimicrobial properties. Unlike other heavy metals, bismuth is non-toxic.

Its unique strength lies in strong spin-orbit coupling — allowing control not just of electron charge, but also of spin, opening new ways to manage current and suppress tunneling.

Bismuth itself is a metal, so it's always conducting — not ideal for on/off logic. The solution is bismuth oxyselenide, a 2D semiconductor that combines thinness, high electron mobility, and quantum properties.

The First Silicon-Free Chip

In February 2025, researchers at Peking University published a paper in Nature introducing the world’s first transistor without silicon. It wasn’t just theoretical — it was a multichannel 2D gate-all-around FET made from bismuth layers.

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The channel was a super-thin 2D bismuth strip wrapped entirely by a gate. The device operates reliably at just 0.5 nm — a size where silicon becomes uncontrollable due to quantum effects.

This bismuth transistor is 40% faster and consumes 10% less energy than the best 3 nm solutions from Intel and TSMC. How? Thanks to high electron mobility, near-zero leakage, compact architecture, and graphene interconnects.

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The Future Beyond Silicon

Though the prototype uses a silicon base for mechanical support, it plays no role in operation. China is actively promoting the tech — the country controls 80% of global bismuth reserves.

Developers claim it is the fastest, most energy-efficient transistor ever made. This is more than a scientific breakthrough — it’s the foundation of a post-silicon era.

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When will we see this in real devices? Experts estimate commercialization will take at least 10 years. Silicon will serve us for a while longer, but the groundwork for a new microelectronics age is already being laid.

Would you want a bismuth-powered smartphone?

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