Molecular Clusters That Can Retain Charge Could Revolutionize Computer Memory 36
jfruh writes:Computing devices have been gobbling up more and more memory, but storage tech has been hitting its limits, creating a bottleneck. Now researchers in Spain and Scotland have reported a breakthrough in working with metal-oxide clusters that can retain their charge. These molecules could serve as the basis for RAM and flash memory that will be leagues smaller than existing components (abstract).
Leagues smaller (Score:5, Funny)
I do not think that word means what you think it means.
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How many leagues in a library of congress?
20,000 leagues under the C.
Will this go the same way as the spintronics? (Score:2)
Not that long ago people were talking about the huge breakthrough the spintronics would bring - that we are going to have terabytes of DRAM which could retain their memory even when power was switched off, that we could turn on our PC and have an almost instantaneous boot-up
So where is the spintronics nowadays?
Re:Will this go the same way as the spintronics? (Score:5, Interesting)
Spintronics is a quantum thing - a way of specifying more information in each electron. As such, it's very difficult to work with.
This is more similar to carbon nanotubes. They're a new thing, which could be very useful, if only you could cheaply and efficiently manufacture them and put them in the proper places on a chip. However:
So using these may be more realistic than carbon nanotubes!
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However I think it's biochemistry that's the key there - reaction rates etc differ without the shear force from gravity and it hasn't been looked at much yet. It's possible that there are drugs that can only be made effectively in space, and such things are frequently worth far more than their weigh
Re: Will this go the same way as the spintronics? (Score:2)
"reaction rates etc differ without the shear force from gravity and it hasn't been looked at much yet."
[citation needed]
I'm a chemist, and I have yet to see a case where gravity plays a measurable role in standard single-phase chemical reactions. Yes, it may play a role in bulk biphasic reactions. But in a standard liquid-phase biochemical reaction, local diffusion forces (collisions) will overwhelm gravity. In addition, most biochemical reactions are stirred to maximize contact between reagents fur
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pu... [nih.gov]
The first is this one which is far less useful:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pa... [nasa.gov]
There's a current experiment on the ISS along those lines that was mentioned in the mainstream press a couple of months back but I can't seem to track down a link. The biochemist interviewed was of the opinion that we have no idea how many reactions are influenced by gravity and was surprised to find so many so quickly.
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FYI: line one of abstract (Score:2)
The research is narrowing down what is going on and not refuting the idea entirely as the AC who is both quoting it as an authoritative source and calling it "Space Nutter junk" is suggesting.
Re: FYI: line one of abstract (Score:2)
I maintain the assertion that the number of reactions that are affected by gravity very few and far between. In fact the last sentence of that abstract contradicts one of the few examples that claimed to observe effects of weightlessness.
Just thinking about this physically, the forces associated with electrostatic interactions and molecular diffusion are many orders of magnitude larger than that of gravity. Gravity is not relevant on the molecular scale. Any effects that may be relevant would be associated
I don't want to precipitate an argument, but ... (Score:2)
Biochemistry is not my field, but I did a bit of stuff with metal solidification and gravity is a pretty major factor with concentration of different phases in ingots since the c
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I'm not the one calling your words scum or dross. It's a legitimate question that I'm responding to. I have in fact thought about the implications of a lack of gravity upon chemical reactions, which is why I pointed out the few cases where it would be important. For homogeneous reactions (which are central to biochemistry), I encourage you to calculate the force of gravity, compared to local electrostatic forced such as dipoles and bond dipoles.
I agree with what you're saying that precipitation reactions
Paywalls pain me (Score:4, Interesting)
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The policy should be: either link to a freely accessible version of the original research, or skip the story entirely. Anything else does more harm than good.
Evolution not revolution (Score:1)
The basic idea behind flash is that you have small electron traps - areas which you can charge by injecting electrons through a barrier - which you clear by draining out those electrons in bulk. This seems to be a reasonable way to make smaller traps. Then again, small traps are part of the poor lifetimes of new flash, and the area size of a single cell is less relevant when you can stack them. So this may provide a small improvement, or offer a different set of trade-offs. But fundamentally bits don't get
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A sufficiently fast evolution can easily be called a revolution. The industrial revolution was actually just an evolution of industry, yet everyone does know it as a revolution. Why? Because it happened really fast.
The title does say it *could* revolutionize. It may just be a small improvement, or fail completely, but it could be a revolution if it suddenly brings fast, cheap, high-density memory in a scale much greater than Flash memory is able to provide.
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Don't compare the time-scale of the industrial revolution to the next version of Firefox.
"Blah, blah, blah... (Score:1)
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Any discussion on the topic is useless (Score:3)
What does a 'write-once-erase’ access model mean? For all we know, it means they can only write the data once, not more then once, and erase it without the ability to do any reads. That's one interpretation of those three words in that order.
Is there some way we can retroactively erase this from Slashdot? It's so broken it cannot be fixed.
Everyone leave this now and don't come back. It's the closest we can get to erasing it. That's what I'm doing. Now.