- Jun 21, 2005
 
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Full article:
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/nn203715c
Vgs to to Ids graph in the middle.
http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/...15c/aop/images/large/nn-2011-03715c_0003.jpeg
A graph of using it as an inverter.... input voltages vary from -2V to 2V..... :|
http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/...15c/aop/images/large/nn-2011-03715c_0004.jpeg
I love how Engadget always hypes these things like silicon is dead and this is the next big thing. From reading the article, it was hard enough to build two transistors. The idea that they could build hundreds of millions of chips with 2 billion transistors on each one of them is a long way away and I'm not even clear on how it would work... how do you do binary arithmetic with a cell that takes -2V to 2V in and outputs 0V to 2V out?
60 years ago, I'm sure people were saying the same thing about germanium.
silicon will never be dead because it's cheap and abundant
It's good to have options. R&D is all about false-starts and dead-ends.
What looks good now could be next year's 157nm litho catastrophe. Having plan B in the works is rarely a bad idea.
But he's right that it will probably continue to be used for a long time in circuits that don't require ridiculously high integration and cutting edge performance. Just like 0.25um and older nodes like that are still used today for many applications.640K ought to be enough for anybody.
The physical limits of silicon will be reached pretty soon.
Full article:
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/nn203715c
Vgs to to Ids graph in the middle.
http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/...15c/aop/images/large/nn-2011-03715c_0003.jpeg
A graph of using it as an inverter.... input voltages vary from -2V to 2V..... :|
http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/...15c/aop/images/large/nn-2011-03715c_0004.jpeg
I love how Engadget always hypes these things like silicon is dead and this is the next big thing. From reading the article, it was hard enough to build two transistors. The idea that they could build hundreds of millions of chips with 2 billion transistors on each one of them is a long way away and I'm not even clear on how it would work... how do you do binary arithmetic with a cell that takes -2V to 2V in and outputs 0V to 2V out?
I doubt that Engadget said anything of the sort 60 years ago.
But, all of the early semiconductor research was on germanium. Like the first 10-20 years, it was all germanium. If anything, at the time silicon seemed like a bit of a long shot for IC's.
So, you disagree with what I wrote? Based on a fairly detailed reading of the paper, I'd still think that graphene is a better gamble. Molybdenite has a few advantages, but I'd still stay with graphene even with the bandgap and other issues.
silicon will never be dead because it's cheap and abundant
But can designs built on it be sufficiently modified to help fix "heat density" issue I keep reading about.
Apparently with each die shrink the silicon area decreases by approximately 50%, but the amount of power required only decreases by 25%.
It would seem to me that if that trend continues "heat density" could at some point become a serious problem.
That leaves us the following question:
Which CPU company benefits the most by commercializing alternatives to silicon?
Intel? IBM? Or perhaps another company?
Diamond is already blasé, the next big thing will be compressed matter ala neutron star computing![]()
Its self-powered too!
You may find this paper (PDF) interesting.
said:V. SUMMARY AND IMPLICATIONS
The 30-year-long trend in microelectronics has been to increase
both speed and density by scaling of device components
(e.g., CMOS switch). However, this trend will end as
we approach the energy barrier due to limits of heat removal
capacity. For nanoelectronics, this result implies that an increase
in device density will require a sacrifice, due to power
consideration, in operational speed, and vice versa. Thus, it
appears that we are entering a regime where tradeoffs are required
between speed and density, quite in contrast to the
traditional simultaneous benefits in speed and density from
conventional scaling.
