http://channels.netscape.com/ns/news/story.jsp?floc=FF-PLS-PLS&id=1209000200
0246059&dt=20021209000200&w=RTR&coview=

International Business Machines Corp. will announce on Monday the smallest
ever working silicon transistor to serve as the nerve center in electronics
ranging from televisions to PCs and cars.
For the past 30 years the industry has been shrinking microprocessors -- the
brains of computers -- and other chip components to put more function into
smaller and smaller cell phones and other computing devices.

Transistors, basically the on-off switches that regulate the flow of
electronic signals used for computing and other processes, are key parts of
the chip.

Reducing the size of the on-off switch in the transistor, known in the
industry as gate length, boosts chip performance and speed, and lowers
manufacturing cost and power consumption, IBM said.

The proof-of-concept transistor measures six nanometers -- about 20,000
times smaller than the width of a single human hair, according to IBM.

That's at least 10 times smaller than transistors in use today, which range
between 60 to 90 nanometers, said Meikei Ieong, a researcher on the IBM
project. A nanometer is one billionth of a meter.

"Each generation of such scaled devices has historically reduced the cost of
doing some function by about 25 percent per year," said Juri Matisoo, vice
president of technology for the Semiconductor Industry Assocation trade
group.

"So what it means, basically, is that things are going to get a lot cheaper
and that you'll be able to do things that aren't possible today, from a
point of view of performance, such as language translation," Matisoo said.

"You could conceive of cell phones that automatically translate from one
language to another," he added.

However, it could be 10 years or more before the teeny transistors find
their way into products on store shelves, Matisoo said.

First, researchers must figure out how to handle the increased heat that is
generated when more transistors are packed into a smaller area.

"You could pack 100 times as many of these transistors in the space of one
of today's transistors," said Matisoo. "So, it's a big jump forward."

As they get smaller, transistors also are more difficult to turn on and off,
so IBM is working on complementary research into how to flip the switches
faster, Ieong said.

"This allows us to be ahead of the game" on boosting performance of chips,
he said. "It opens up a new research area for us that wasn't possible in the
past."

The six-nanometer transistor IBM has developed functions in that it can
switch on and off, but has not been proven to work in a device yet,
according to Ieong.

IBM will present a paper on the research at the International Electron
Devices Meeting being held this week in San Francisco.



xponent

Brain Insertion Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to