HP breaks the 2 nanometer barrier 23
Dodger47 writes "Interesting story from HP on their research in nanotechnology. They're using chemicals that line themselves up to form the wires of a circut board instead of using more traditional ways of pressing circuts, and using simple, small molocules to take over the role of transisters. Once again begging the question, "How small can you get? " Good size site, with a lot of interesting information about how you work at the nano level.
Besides that... (Score:1)
By the way, first! Maybe....
Re:Besides that... (Score:1)
*sigh* (Score:1)
Re:Besides that... (Score:1)
Science is cool! (Score:1)
So are these guys gonna get together with the doctors who are studying the brain pathways?
The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk
Appropriate.. (Score:1)
Nice to see they were working on this in the Richard Feynman laboratory (or at least chose that to be the location of their photo-op). After all, Feynman birthed the notion of nanotechnology in his paper There's Plenty Of Room At The Bottom
Plus, he was one cool-ass mofo.
Hoopla (Score:2)
Now, this looks like some *cool* stuff, but it should be noted that all they said that they can do is produce a "parallel array of wires" 2 nm wide. Now, I'd say that is a substantial breakthrough, but still a far cry from being able to produce a transistor at that level. Now, if they can "self-assemble" an n-p junction at the 2 nm level, well, I'd quit everything and buy stock in HP.
Nanocomputing: Electric, Mechanical, or Quantum? (Score:2)
There are three alternatives, one easier, one better, and one much better. The first is rod-logic machines, which are analagous to the Analytical Engine (in the same way a Pentium III is analagous to fifties-era soldered transitors ), which don't require any theoretical breakthroughs (and for that matter, have already been proven in the mathematical sense), only decent nano-scale manufacturing. I say this is easier because technique breakthroughs (nano-manufacturing) are more likely to occur than theoritical (new transitor theory/materials), at least in the short-term. (After all, technique is limited by what can be, and theory is not...)
The second alternative is nano-scale optical computing, which doesn't use electricity either. Optical computing is farther along than rod-logic in the lab, but it does have a problem similar to nano-electric computing (optical transitors). The benefits of optical computing should be understood by the
The third alternative, and the hardest, is the quantum computer, something that I'm equally sure that
In summary, I wouldn't get too excited about nano-scale electronics. Better or cheaper (or both) computing is coming in about the same time-frame.
-_Quinn
More on the HP guys (Score:2)
limits (Score:1)
Re:Trans-size (Score:1)
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Feynman (Score:1)
I have always thought the coolest geeks actualy had lives. Feynman was proof of that. (Contrast that insane idiot in PI)
^~~^~^^~~^~^~^~^^~^^~^~^~~^^^~^^~~^~~~^~~^~
Re:Besides that... (Score:1)
Re:Besides that... (Score:1)
For specialized applications and people with deep pockets, 3 to 5 years may be feasible... but for us? It's 10 to 15 years, at least
Pedants are revolting (Score:1)
It does not "beg the question." It raises the question. Begging the question is a logical falacy.