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While digital electronics has become entirely ubiquitous in todays world and appears in the limelight, analogue electronics is still playing a crucial role in many devices and applications. Current analogue circuits are mostly manufactured using silicon as active material, but the ever present demand for improved performance, new devices and flexible integration has - similar to their digital counterparts - pushed for research into alternative materials. In recent years two-dimensional materials have received considerable research interest, fitting their promising properties for future electronics. In this work we demonstrate an operational amplifier - a basic building block of analogue electronics - using a two-dimensional semiconductor, namely molybdenum disulfide, as active material. Our device is capable of stable operation with good performance, and we demonstrate its use in feedback circuits such as inverting amplifiers, integrators, log amplifiers, and transimpedance amplifiers.
Proton radiation damage is an important failure mechanism for electronic devices in near-Earth orbits, deep space and high energy physics facilities. Protons can cause ionizing damage and atomic displacements, resulting in device degradation and malf
An exponential increase in the performance of silicon microelectronics and the demand to manufacture in great volumes has created an ecosystem that requires increasingly complex tools to fabricate and characterize the next generation of chips. Howeve
The advancement of nanoscale electronics has been limited by energy dissipation challenges for over a decade. Such limitations could be particularly severe for two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors integrated with flexible substrates or multi-layered p
This mini review focuses on conductance measurements through molecular junctions containing few tens of molecules, which are fabricated along two approaches: (i) conducting atomic force microscope contacting a self-assembled monolayers on metal surfa
Two-dimensional (2D) crystals have emerged as a class of materials with tuneable carrier density. Carrier doping to 2D semiconductors can be used to modulate manybody interactions and to explore novel composite particles. Holstein polaron is a small