Thursday, 26 September 2013

World's first carbon-nanotube computer build


Scientists, led by an Indian-origin researcher, have developed the world's first computer built entirely with carbon nanotubes, opening the door to a new generation of faster-running digital devices.

Carbon nanotubes - a semiconductor material - has the potential to launch a new generation of electronic devices that run faster, while using less energy, than those made from silicon chips, researchers said.

This unprecedented feat culminates years of efforts by scientists around the world to harness this promising but quirky material.

"People have been talking about a new era of carbon nanotube electronics moving beyond silicon," said Subhasish Mitra, an electrical engineer and computer scientist at Stanford University.

"But there have been few demonstrations of complete digital systems using this exciting technology. Here is the proof," said Mitra, lead author of the study.

CNT's are long chains of carbon atoms that are extremely efficient at conducting and controlling electricity. They are so thin - thousands of CNT's could fit side by side in a human hair - that it takes very little energy to switch them off, according to Wong, a co-author of the paper.

Over time, researchers have devised tricks to grow 99.5 per cent of CNT's in straight lines. But with billions of nanotubes on a chip, even a tiny degree of misaligned tubes

could cause errors, so that problem remained.

To eliminate the wire-like or metallic nanotubes, the Stanford team switched off all the good CNT's. Then they pumped the semiconductor circuit full of electricity.

All of that electricity concentrated in the metallic nanotubes, which grew so hot that they burned up and literally vaporised into tiny puffs of carbon dioxide. This

sophisticated technique eliminated the metallic CNT's in the circuit.

The Stanford researchers created a powerful algorithm that maps out a circuit layout that is guaranteed to work no matter whether or where CNT's might be askew.



FREE HIT COUNTERS