Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Nanowire Computing Made Practical

Researchers have made efficient nanowire logic circuits that could be mass produced, slashing the size of transistors.

By Kevin Bullis

Monday, September 25, 2006

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

One of the leading candidates for a technology that could make computers smaller and more powerful is based on transistors made from semiconducting nanowires. But until now, circuits made with such transistors have been impractical, because they were too power hungry and too difficult to manufacture. Now researchers at Caltech have built efficient nanowire-based circuits using a process they believe could be reliable enough for mass production.

This nanowire-based CMOS circuit (the nanowires are too small to see) could help lead to ultrasmall computers. (Credit: Dunwei Wang, Caltech)

The first applications, which could be available commercially in five years, will probably be in ultrasensitive, inexpensive sensors that could detect and measure hundreds of different cancer markers or pathogens in a small sample, such as a single drop of blood. Eventually, the nanowire-based electronics could be used in processors for computing.

Nanowire logic is part of a growing effort to find new ways to produce computer chips after conventional methods run into physical limits. Other possibilities include carbon-nanotube transistors and molecular electronics, which would use organic molecules as transistors; but while those technologies have their own advantages, nanowires can be made of silicon, the material chip makers are used to working with. And they can more easily be made into arrays with consistent electronic properties.

In the current work, the Caltech researchers created logic gates in which the centers of neighboring nanowire transistors were spaced at about 30 nanometers, denser than in state-of-the-art devices made with current technology. But lead researcher James Heath, a chemistry professor at Caltech, says that in these experiments, achieving the smallest possible size wasn't the goal: they could have gone "much, much denser," cutting the spacing at least in half. Such increase in density would allow far more transistors--and hence more computing power--to be squeezed onto a chip.

The work demonstrates for the first time the ability to exploit nanowires in CMOS, today's standard semiconductor technology, using a process that could be adapted to mass production, Heath says. Most previous work with nanowire transistors had used older, more energy-intensive technology. And the few examples of CMOS-type circuits with nanowires were one-off prototypes, Heath says, not practical candidates for large-scale manufacturing.

CMOS relies on two kinds of transistors, n-type and p-type. One reason for the lack of reproducible nanowire CMOS devices is that it's been difficult to make n-type nanowire transistors reliably. Even slight changes to their surfaces, caused by impurities deposited during manufacturing, can lead to wide variations in performance. Indeed, "most everything you do makes them p-type," Heath says. So after studying how nanowires respond to surface changes, the researchers selected methods for treating the surfaces to remove impurities. This enabled them to make reliable devices.

Comments

  • DNA nanoelectronics breakthrough
    Nanolectronics technology is under development at Vulvox.  The President of Vulvox Nano/Biotechnology Corporation was interviewed about this breakthrough in molecular electronics. The interview  was published in Nano Investor's News. In the interview Neil Farbstein discusses the implications of self assembling three dimensional integrated circuitry containing nanotransistors as well as novel technology to manufacture        5 nanometer CMOS type transistors that can be stacked in three dimensonal layers to construct chips that contain 50 trillion transistors in a square centimeter. That is a million times the density of today's integrated circuitry. It might be possible to construct a square centimenter DNA molecular electronics chip that contains all of the circuitry in the world's biggest currently operating supercomputer; blue gene L.  According to the past President of the Georgia Chapter of the American Chemical Society, Dr. Thomas Netzel :

    "If successful, this research program has the potential to develop two and three dimensional integrated circuitry with transistor densities a million times those found on today's integrated circuit chips. DNA diode and transistor research may lead to nanosized intelligent chemical probes and biosensors. Likely the world will be changed in innumerable ways if this research program is successful. I am glad to help you and your company take the first steps toward fulfillment of that goal."


    Vulvox has a MEGA-TERABIT memory in the works! It will fit on a square centimeter chip and it will have the ability to hold every movie and videotape ever recorded and also every audiotape and every audio recording all in the space of a square centimenter. The ultimate I-Pod!

    Corporations and University laboratories are encouraged to contact us at protn7@att.net


    Rate this comment: 12345

    protn7
    10/31/2006
    Posts:69
    Avg Rating:
    2/5
    • Re: DNA nanoelectronics breakthrough
      The above comment by Neil Farbstein, so called president of Vulvox, is untrue. He spams technology news forums with wild claims of his research, yet none of it exists. Farbstein is a conman trying to defraud investors.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      N O M
      04/21/2008
      Posts:23
      Avg Rating:
      4/5

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

Making 3D Maps on the Move
Technology Review November/December 2009

Current Issue

Natural Gas Changes the Energy Map
The United States has vast supplies of this cleaner fossil fuel. But how should we use it?
Featured Content
Sponsored by:
White Papers

Twelve ways to reduce costs with SQL Server 2008
Find out how to reduce costs and get more efficient

Download

Total Economic Impact of SQL Server 2008 Upgrade
Forrester reports on increasing productivity and management capabilities

Download 

Achieving Cost and Resource Savings with UC
How Office Communications Server R2 and Exchange Server can make your business smarter and more efficient

Download 

The Compelling Case for Conferencing
Read how you can improve workload support and find IT efficiencies

Download

How Windows Server 2008 R2 Helps Optimize IT and Save you Money
Read how you can improve workload support and find IT efficiencies

Download

Windows Server 2008 R2 Hyper-V Live Migration
See how Windows Server 2008 R2 and Hyper-V enable virtualization and Live Migration

Download
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES
Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.