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Graphene nanoribbons could be the savior of Moore’s Law

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posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 04:37 AM
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With each new generation of microchips, transistors are being placed closer and closer together. This can only go on so long before there’s no more room to improve, or something revolutionary has to come along to change everything. One of the materials that might be the basis of that revolution is none other than graphene. Researchers at the University of California at Berkeley are hot on the trail of a form of so-called nanoribbon graphene that could increase the density of transistors on a computer chip by as much as 10,000 times.

Graphene nanoribbons could be the savior of Moore’s Law





Seem to be rather a few emerging technologies doing the rounds these days that challenge Moore's law to some degree or another. Most of them seem to be employ the use of Graphene and Nanotechnology over our standard Silicon production techniques.

What are your thoughts fellow ATS members regarding these emerging technologies and the future of integrated circuits as we know them?


edit on 24-2-2014 by andy06shake because: (no reason given)



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 04:51 AM
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reply to post by andy06shake
 


How did we not discover graphene earlier? It's a single atom compound!!

I'm looking forward to what they can achieve with this.



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 04:56 AM
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reply to post by iRoyalty
 


I think silicon was a lot easier to work with and engineer back then than Graphene hence its use. Also the electrical properties of Graphene regarding electronic and electrical engineering were not discovered until 1985 when Klaus von Klitzing received the Nobel prize for his discovery.


en.wikipedia.org...
edit on 24-2-2014 by andy06shake because: (no reason given)



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 05:00 AM
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Actually, even if that concept could be put into manufacturing soon enough (which is unlikely), it would only delay the inevitable a generation or two. I'd expect a need for cell redundancy to correct for other serious issues which seem likely.

Having only a couple of charges (or just one!) in a channel will be accompanied by a huge increase in signal uncertainty when there is an increase or decrease of a single electron or hole. That delta of 1 charge is a 33% to 50% change. With 5 or more charges in a channel, it's a lot different.

With smaller cells, and fewer than 5 charges in a channel, we can use redundancy in parallel small cells to "vote" for whether a 1 or 0 is believed to exist. It would be wise to use an odd number of parallel cells or there would be a question of what to do with ties.....

IMO Moore's law is already dead for CMOS.


edit on 24-2-2014 by BayesLike because: (no reason given)



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 08:28 AM
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Perhaps they shouldn't have taken it so literally and instead called it "Moore's Rule of Thumb, give or take" ?

Because obviously all it takes is a few nukes or a Carrington class Solar Storm to set us back significantly.
Or people could grow lazy, unproductive, and lose their motivation to innovate. Etc.

All sorts of reasons why it's not an actual "Law" but rather more of like a "Suggested Guideline for inference and projection purposes".

Besides, the wiki on it says :

Moore's law is the observation that, over the history of computing hardware, the number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles approximately every two years


"Approximately" ?

Very similar; closely resembling:


So it's like in religion, when you take a suggestion to an extreme it becomes unrealistic.
Well this particular "Law" isn't realistic in a completely literal understanding.
It's "Approximated" with "Reality". You can create "Simulations" with it.


BTW- Thanks for the thread OP, it's always good to discuss these new emerging technologies and their potentials.



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 10:19 AM
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For some why reason I thought grapheme could be used in nuclear cleanup......what ever happened to that prediction?
Id say we are badly in need of something like that.......
More transistors on a chip doesn't cut it, but it will be interesting in the future.....
This stuff sounds like a wonder drug for technology....



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 01:29 PM
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reply to post by stirling
 


I think NASA toyed with the idea of using a graphene based radiation shield on one of there future Mars missions and you are correct it also has the ability to quickly remove radioactive material from contaminated water, apparently something to do with the graphene oxide’s large surface area. The properties of this substance are indeed varied and rather interesting to say the least but trust me more transistors on a chip as you put it will only lead to even more remarkable breakthroughs in the fields of physics, mathematics and computing.

edit on 24-2-2014 by andy06shake because: (no reason given)



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 03:15 PM
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reply to post by BayesLike
 

Quantum effects were bound to put limits on transistor density sooner or later so even if this worked, it's only delaying the inevitable.

reply to post by muzzleflash
 

I agree use of the word "law" probably wasn't the best choice, maybe "Moore's correlation" would be more appropriate. It's not really a law, because we already know enough quantum mechanics to be pretty sure that transistor density increases can't continue without limit.



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 07:09 PM
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Shrink the batteries and shrinkable display first, then we can talk about making it smaller.
No use having 1 atom transistor with batteries/display size the size of your palm, still didnt get smaller.



posted on Feb, 25 2014 @ 03:47 AM
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reply to post by NullVoid
 


I imagine that's where "Heads Up Displays" like Google glass will make there mark as to the batteries size and life cycle, those technologies are also maturing, becoming more efficient and compact.

However there is more of a market for the applications of this technology than the mobile device industry's.

Personally i like my displays big!

edit on 25-2-2014 by andy06shake because: (no reason given)



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