New Horizon For Nanotech 28
UserID 3.14 writes "It looks like faster chip-building tehnology is coming, and it may usher in the next wave of MEMS and nanotechnology with it. This article from Science Daily talks about a new electron-beam photolithography machine at JPL that rasterizes 10 times faster than the previous standard with a beam imprint that's half the size. Chip prototyping will go faster and the researchers there will be able to deal with features that are molecule-sized. Best of all, if you want to use the machine, they give a contact for further info."
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
Oh, but we already have. Ranging from 8-bitters to the LEON (32 bit SPARC implementation, written under ESA contract).
Of course, there is a lot more to open source hardware than just CPUs, just look at OpenCores [opencores.org].
help revive the tech sector! (Score:1)
Um, that's nice, I guess. (Score:1)
They just replaced a really old system, and decided they could get some PR value from that. [shrug]
Re:Um, that's nice, I guess. (Score:2)
Nothing wrong with that imho
Nope, nothing wrong with that. But (a) chances are good that this PR release wasn't primarily directed at those researchers, (b) putting a reference to this on Slashdot seems silly, and (c) the Slashdot story title was really overblown.
Oh, yeah, and (d) it annoys me that the distinction between what's an article and what's a press release seems to be lost on most people. (Including many journalists, it seems.)
Interesting. . . but not all we need. (Score:1)
throughput speed: not production level (Score:1)
*Of course, if you can scale all the circuits by 2x then you don't need as much area, but device and transmission line scaling doesn't work that way...
no sig here
Re:How did they solve the tunneling problem? (Score:1)
Pshaw! (Score:1)
Anyway, I'm sure we'll be turning out profitable projects any day now. No, really. Just wait.
How did they solve the tunneling problem? (Score:2)
First contact (Score:1)
Re:Next Wave? (Score:1)
Next Wave? (Score:1)
and it may usher in the next wave of MEMS and nanotechnology with it
The 'Next Wave' of nanotech? I don't think there was a first wave, unless you consider the masterbatory fantasies of extropians and sci-fi worshippers.
Oh wait, they're the same thing...
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Yay! Community Engineering! (Score:2)
Boy, I can't wait 'till we have open hardware! That would be so cool. Maybe after that, we can move even further on, and have "Open Source" engineering. Wouldn't it be great to know that the bridge you're driving across of the skyscraper you work in weren't designed by professionals, but by the community during their spare time? Boy, that idea just excites me so much!
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Re:First contact (Score:1)
Re:First contact (Score:2)
They're gonna think, "whoops! Maybe we should've brought the BIG ray guns!"
Re:Yay! Community Engineering! (Score:1)
Hey, it could work. Just think how much easier it would be to spot bugs!
[Cell phone rings]
"Yea hi. I'm going over the Red Hat bridge right now..."
*CREEEEK*
"Aw, crap."
Another 30 years.... (Score:1)
Hopefully, they'll have a nanobot that can go about my arteries, sweeping cholestrol away!
Cool! (Score:5)
This would also make it possible for the open-source movement to expand into hardware as well as software. Imagine renting time at the local fab to sample a processor that was designed entirely by the community. If this technology pans out, we could eventually adapt all the advantages of today's open-source software into low cost open-source hardware. I can't wait to see what advances in microprocessor technology will evolve once the open-source community sets it's mind to developing a free(as in speech) processor. Yay!
Re:Um, that's nice, I guess. (Score:1)
Quote: "We want to let researchers from universities, private industry and other government institutions know that we now have this capability and that it is available for their use," said Dr. Barbara Wilson, chief technologist for JPL. Unquote
Nothing wrong with that imho
vinlud
Re:Ebeam lithography explains a lot (Score:1)
You could be seeing the results of that.
vacuous press release (Score:3)
I've done extensive nanofabrication, and these guys have chosen their words so carefully as to be misleading. When they talk about making structures on the "subcellular" scale for biological research, it sounds impressive but really isn't. A typical red blood cell is 5 microns across. The smallest features produced photolithographically for your Athlon are 0.13 microns across. Even more annoying is their claim of molecular and submolecular scale device size without actually naming a number. Molecules can be big - DNA can be many microns long when uncoiled.
A meaningful figure of merit for resolution is: how small a feature can you pattern in resist and then transfer to an underlying substrate, either by etching or through metallization. Fundamentally, e-beam lithography's resolution is limited by the choice of resist, the physics of the development process, and the subsequent pattern transfer step. Making features smaller in width than 10 nm (roughly 40 atoms) is exceedingly hard, even in isolation. Doing that regularly, at production speeds with sub-10 nm registration across a 30 cm wafer, is industrially unachievable right now.
As far as I can tell, this is not a breakthrough in any way, shape, or form. This kind of overhype worries me. It's almost worse than the utopian claptrap from people like Drexler - everyone with a clue know Drexler is a loon, but people may actually believe spokespeople from JPL....
Hurrah. (Score:1)
Now they can design and make chips even faster. Now they can make even more powerful chips.
If they, 'they' being major chip manufacturers are to make chips go through even faster, that high end gaming rig you bought last month just might be able to keep up with the chip released this month.
Don't get me wrong, I like the fact that hardware can be developed faster. It's just that as things are, my 'gaming rig' is a duron850 with a 16 meg video card. Nothing high end, but it runs sweet and stable. Despite being a windows box.
Anyways, I just want to know, how fast exactly will the chips be going? And will it shatter Moore's law into oblivion?
still not a practical method (Score:1)
Re:In Other News... (Score:1)
Bowie, I don't know why you're saying (and so rudely!) that VA Linux have not done the right thing by the investor community. I personally bought some shares of @LNUX a few weeks ago for $1.56 each, and have since almost doubled my money! I think they are an excellent company with very strong growth potential.
I just think it's sad to see people writing unpleasant messages on web boards to try to influence stock prices downwards and harm other people's valuable investments.
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
It might happen. You just interpret the word free wrongly. Open source hardware just means the specs were created by a non-profit community. However, to actually get one of those chips you will have to pay. Pretty much like buying a linux distro. The only difference is that they do not toast it onto a CD but onto a chip. The only difference is that you won't be able to download the result for free or apply patches yourself
Having said this, it strikes me as extremely unlike that we will ever have open-source CPUs
Re:Cool! (Score:3)
This will be a nice toy for chip designers and exotic devices, but any feasible mass-production 'nano'tech will almost certainly require a high degree of self-assembly, which e-beam lith is not.
Ebeam lithography explains a lot (Score:1)
MEMS based storage (Score:4)
The short story is that it's a very small sled containing magnetic data (on a substrate) that is pushed by very small actuators of an assembly over read/write heads. It fits on the price/speed/storage curve somewhere in between hard drives and Flash. If you want to know more from people who actually know what they're talking about, read the intro and then click on their research papers.
I sure wish you could buy the stuff, but it's still a few years from primetime.