Archive for the ‘memory’ tag
Storage on a molecular level
Researchers at The University of Nottingham are exploring ways of exploiting the unique properties of carbon nanotubes to create a cheap and compact memory cell that uses little power and writes information at high speeds.
Miniaturisation of computer devices involves continual improvement and shrinking of their basic element, the transistor. This process could soon reach its fundamental limit. As transistors approach nanoscales their operation is disrupted by quantum phenomena, such as electrons tunnelling through the barriers between wires.
Read more on: carbon nanotubes, DRAM, Electronics, electrons, Flash, memory, nanoscale, SRAM, transistors, University of NottinghamNanotube device set to rival transistor-switched silicon-based memory
Researchers have produced a novel memory device set to rival transistor-switched silicon-based memory.
Conventional memory chips in electronic devices are made up of transistors, resistors and capacitors built in layers on a silicon wafer through a photolithographic process, during which precise patterns are etched on the silicon to form the chip. Today’s technology allows several million transistors to be built on a piece of silicon the size of a pinhead, but many researchers believe this form of memory has been pushed to its limits.
Researchers have been trying to create electromechanically driven switches small enough to rival transistor-switched silicon-based memory. Unlike transistors, electromechanically driven switches contain moving parts. Not only do electromechanical devices have excellent ON-OFF rations and fast switching characteristics, but the physical separation between the switch and capacitor in such devices means the data leakage problem is significantly reduced. However, until now, the technology has not been a viable alternative to silicon-based arrangements because it involved larger cells and more complex fabrication processes.
Professor Gehan Amaratunga and a team of international researchers have remedied these drawbacks by creating a novel nanoelectromechanical (NEM) switched capacitor based in vertically aligned multi-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs).
Read more on: capacitor, electromechanically, Electronics, memory, nanotubes, NEM, Silicon, switch, transistor