The frontier of information processing lies in nanoscience and nanotechnology research. At the nanoscale, materials, and structures can be engineered to exhibit interesting new properties, some based on quantum mechanical effects. Our research focuses on developing nanofabrication technology at the few-nanometer length scale. We use these technologies to push the envelope of what is possible with photonic and electrical devices, focusing in particular on superconductive and free-electron devices. Our research combines electrical engineering, physics, and materials science and helps extend the limits of nanoscale engineering.

The nanocryotron: A superconducting-nanowire three-terminal electrothermal device

Recent QNN News

Navid Abedzadeh Highlighted by RLE

Periodically, the Research Laboratory for Electronics (RLE) at MIT highlights one research student. This month, QNN’s Navid Abedzadeh was highlighted. Navid is currently involved in the Quantum Electron Microscope project. The aim of this project is developing a tool...

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NbN Nanowire Research Highlighted in Scilight

Recent work published by our group was featured in Scilight "New method for making superconducting NbN nanowires could make single photons easy prey" by Mark Bello. The reference paper is: Andrew E. Dane, Adam N. McCaughan, Di Zhu, Qingyuan Zhao, Chung-Soo Kim,...

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