• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Carbon Nanotube Technology Exceeds 100GHz for First Time in RF Applications

November 20, 2019 By admin Leave a Comment

Carbonics, Inc. today announced that carbon nanotube technology has for the first time achieved speeds exceeding 100GHz in-radio frequency (RF) applications. The milestone eclipses the performance – and efficiency – of traditional RF-CMOS technology that is ubiquitous in modern consumer electronics including cell phones. The news opens the door for this new technology to potentially provide a powerful boost for 5G and mm-Wave technologies.

“With this exciting accomplishment, the timing is ripe to leverage our CMOS-compatible technology for the 5G and mmWave defense communication markets. We are now engaged in licensing and technology transfer partnerships with industry participants, while we continue to advance this disruptive RF technology,” said Carbonics’ CEO Kos Galatsis. Carbonics believes that its ZEBRA technology will likely first be adopted in military applications before being used more broadly.

The milestone was reported in the paper, “Wafer-scalable, aligned carbon nanotube transistors operating at frequencies of over 100 GHz,” published this week in the journal, Nature Electronics. A separate commentary in Nature Electronics called the research “a remarkable technology milestone.” The commentary concluded that, “We are now, finally, close to a tipping point in which nanotubes become a serious competitor to silicon in almost all areas of microelectronics.”

For nearly two decades, researchers have theorized that carbon nanotubes would be well suited as a high-frequency transistor technology due to its unique 1-dimensional electron transport characteristics. The engineering challenge has been to assemble the high purity semiconducting nanotubes into densely aligned arrays and create a working device out of the nanomaterial.

As reported in this paper, Carbonics, a venture backed start-up, has successfully overcome this challenge and for the first time demonstrated device performance exceeding RF-CMOS in key RF metrics. Projections based on scaling single carbon nanotube device metrics suggest the technology could ultimately far exceed the top-tier incumbent RF technology, GaAs.

Carbonics employs a deposition technology called ZEBRA that enables carbon nanotubes to be densely aligned and deposited onto a variety of chip substrates including silicon, silicon-on-insulator, quartz and flexible materials. This allows the technology to be directly integrated with traditional CMOS digital logic circuits and overcomes the typical problem of heterogeneous integration.

In 2014, Carbonics was spun-out from the joint center of UCLA-USC and King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST) called the Center of Excellence for Green Nanotechnologies and academic funding support from SRC, DARPA and the U.S. Air Force. The work published in Nature Electronics was funded by the US Army contract No. W911NF19P002 and by King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology Center (KACST).

“This milestone shows that carbon nanotubes, long thought to be a promising communications chip technology, can deliver,” said Dr. Joe Qiu, Program Manager at the Army Research Office, who reviewed the research. “The next step is scaling this technology, proving that it can work in high-volume manufacturing. Ultimately, this technology could help the Army meet its needs in communications, radar, electronic warfare and other sensing applications.”

About Carbonics, Inc.
Carbonics aims to revolutionize the billion-dollar RF semiconductor market by employing CMOS plus carbon towards a single 5G wireless chip to vastly improve the power consumption and performance of 5G and mmWave products. For more information, visit carbonicsinc.com.

About the Army Research Office
The Army Research Office is an element of U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command’s Army Research Laboratory.

Filed Under: Tech Tagged With: Carbon Nanotube, RF Applications, RF CMOS technology

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Dify Raises $30 Million to Power the Next Wave of Production AI Applications
  • Nscale’s $2 Billion Bet on the Physical Backbone of the AI Economy
  • Why USB-C Charging on the MacBook Neo Raises Questions About Port Durability
  • MagSafe Wireless Charging: The Magnetic Reinvention of Power
  • Apple Unveils MacBook Neo: A $599 Entry Into the Mac Ecosystem
  • Apple Unveils M5 Pro and M5 Max: A New Era for MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and Studio Display
  • Apple iPhone 17e: Performance, Practicality, and a Smarter Entry Point into the iPhone 17 Family
  • Apple iPad Air M4 Arrives With 12GB Memory, Wi-Fi 7, and a Serious AI Push
  • Ericsson and Intel Are Redefining What 6G Is Actually For
  • Hollow-Core Fibre, Light Running Through Air Instead of Glass

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Memory Crunch: Why Prices Are Surging and Why Making More Memory Isn’t Easy
The End of Accounting as We Knew It
The Era of Superhuman Logistics Has Arrived: Building the First Autonomous Freight Network
Why Nvidia Shares Jumped on Meta, and Why the Market Cared
Accrual Launches With $75M to Push AI-Native Automation Into Core Accounting Workflows
Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Moment, or How Regulation Became a Competitive Handicap
Palantir Q4 2025: From Earnings Beat to Model Re-Rating
Baseten Raises $300M to Dominate the Inference Layer of AI, Valued at $5B
Nvidia’s China Problem Is Self-Inflicted, and Washington Should Stop Pretending Otherwise
USPS and the Theater of Control: How Government Freezes Failure in Place
Armadin Raises $189.9 Million to Build an AI Attacker That Defends the Enterprise
Day Zero Threat Research Summit, August 30 – September 1, 2026, Las Vegas
CrowdStrike Returns to Profit as Revenue Climbs to $1.31 Billion in Q4
Cloudflare 2026 Threat Report Signals the Automation of Cyberwar
Fal.Con Gov 2026, March 18, Washington, D.C.
Huper Corporation Raises $1.5M Pre-Seed to Build a Security-First AI Chief of Staff
CyberBay Summit 2026, March 11–13, Tampa, Florida
Zscaler’s Q2 Beat and the Market’s Reluctance to Celebrate
AI as the New Insider: Why Trust, Not Code, Is Now the Weakest Link
Cybersecurity Meets Corporate Travel: Darktrace Chooses AI-Driven Navan to Power Global Mobility

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Why Attraction-Grabbing Stations Win at Tech Events
Why Nvidia Let Go of Arm, and Why It Matters Now
When the Market Wants a Story, Not Numbers: Rethinking AMD’s Q4 Selloff
BBC and the Gaza War: How Disproportionate Attention Reshapes Reality
Parallel Museums: Why the Future of Art Might Be Copies, Not Originals
ClickHouse Series D, The $400M Bet That Data Infrastructure, Not Models, Will Decide the AI Era
AI Productivity Paradox: When Speed Eats Its Own Gain
Voice AI as Infrastructure: How Deepgram Signals a New Media Market Segment
COMPUTEX 2026, June 2–5, Taipei
360° Mobility Mega Shows 2026, April 14–17, Taipei
Forrester CX Summit Series 2026: Amsterdam, New York, San Francisco
IAMPHENOM 2026, March 10–12, Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia
Billington State and Local CyberSecurity Summit, March 9–11, 2026, Washington, D.C.
Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2026 – 2–5 March, Barcelona, Spain
The AI Summit London, 10–11 June 2026, Tobacco Dock, London
aim10x Digital 2026, March 18, Virtual
Harvard Business Review Strategy Summit, February 26, 2026, Virtual
International Compact Modeling Conference, July 30–31, 2026, Long Beach, California

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography