4.6 Review

Anion Sensors as Logic Gates: A Close Encounter?

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 22, Issue 18, Pages 6148-6178

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201504396

Keywords

anion receptors; chemical inputs; computer components; logic gates; molecular computation

Funding

  1. SERB-DST, India [YSS/2015/000013]
  2. DST, India [DST-TM-WTI-2K14-213]
  3. DST Nanomission, India [SR/NM/NS-20/2014]

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Computers have become smarter, smaller, and more efficient due to the downscaling of silicon-based components. Top-down miniaturisation of silicon-based computer components is fast reaching its limitations because of physical constraints and economical non-feasibility. Therefore, the possibility of a bottom-up approach that uses molecules to build nano-sized devices has been initiated. As a result, molecular logic gates based on chemical inputs and measurable optical outputs have captured significant attention very recently. In addition, it would be interesting if such molecular logic gates could be developed by making use of ion sensors, which can give significantly sensitive output information. This review provides a brief introduction to anion receptors, molecular logic gates, a comprehensive review on describing recent advances and progress on development of ion receptors for molecular logic gates, and a brief idea about the application of molecular logic gates.

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