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Chips Could Crunch at Light Speed

sphere   on 05 May 2003 - 10:59 · 9 comments & 495 views

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Researchers at IBM have used carbon molecules to emit light, a breakthrough that could replace silicon as the foundation of chips and lead to faster computers and telecommunication equipment.

The focus of the research team was ultratiny, tube-shaped carbon molecules, or nanotubes, that are more than 50,000 times thinner than an average human hair, according to a statement from IBM released this week.

The scientists were able to engineer the carbon nanotubes not only to conduct current, but also to emit light.

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News source: PCWorld.com


Silicon Substitute

This is the first time light has ever been generated from a molecule by applying electricity, said Phaedron Avouris, manager of nanometer-scale science at IBM Research's Watson Labs.

Light, already the foundation of today's high-speed communication networks, could someday be used to process data in computers and other electronic devices, as engineers run out of ways to cram more performance into silicon chips. Carbon nanotubes with semiconductor properties can be made into transistors much smaller than current silicon transistors, increasing the number of transistors that can be placed on a single chip.

Silicon, the main material used in semiconductors, does not emit light, and therefore can't be used in optoelectronic products, Avouris said. The capability of these nanotubes to generate light means the same type of material is suitable for both electronic and optoelectronic uses, he said. Optoelectronic components include solar cells, light-emitting diodes (LED), and optical-fiber communications products.

Current optical-fiber communications devices are much larger than those that could be constructed from carbon nanotubes, said David Tomanek, professor of physics at Michigan State University. Carbon nanotubes could allow the manufacture of extremely small optical fibers, allowing a greater number of fibers to be placed in a smaller device, he said.

The more fibers in a communications device, the larger the pipe for information to flow through, Tomanek said.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 9 additional comments
(1 reply) #1 mrk on 05 May 2003 - 11:17
so, phasers in 2010?
#1.1 longwilli on 05 May 2003 - 11:39
lol cant wait for mine
#2 [X]-bYtE on 05 May 2003 - 11:46
.. And soon lightsabels
#3 Furet on 05 May 2003 - 12:26
I'm gonna be a Jedi
#4 zi0nx5 on 05 May 2003 - 13:17
i'd hate to drop one of those nanotubes on the ground ... [I]5H!7 where'd it go![/I]
#5 mr_skrilla on 05 May 2003 - 15:56
you guys joke but this sh*t will be powering our computers in 10 or 15 years.
#6 Jstphish on 05 May 2003 - 16:10
Good a step in the right direction for computing.
#7 Germano on 05 May 2003 - 18:56
[QUOTE]The scientists were able to engineer the carbon nanotubes not only to conduct [B]current[/B], but also to emit light.[/QUOTE]
#8 Darkness2k on 06 May 2003 - 08:57
Maybe I should hold off my computer upgrade until the... AMD Lightning (Hey... if they use that name when its released, I want 5% of all sales profit!) or Intel LightBender... gets released... Then again, I guess all the companies will come up with fancy new names... No more Pentium 9's or Athlon XP's... Wonder what they would come up with... Intel, AMD, VIA, Nvidia, ATI, Creative etc Should be interesting!

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