Posted on 03/22/2013 5:02:54 PM PDT by LibWhacker
Scientists at IBM claimed today that it has cracked a materials conundrum that may well create a new class of memory and logic chips.
The scientists discovered a way to operate chips using small ionic currents. Thats streams of charged atoms mimicking the way the human brain works.
Moores Law is close to bust at the CMOS level, IBM thinks and low power and high performance semiconductors using different techniques will soon be needed.
The IBM scientists have figured out that you can reversibly transform metal oxides between inslating and conductive states by inserting and removing oxygen ions through electric fields at the interface between oxide and liquid. When the oxide material becomes conductive, materials maintain a stable metallic state, even when power is off.
Dr Stuart Parkin, an IBM Fellow at IBM Research, said: Our ability to understand and control matter at atomic scale dimensions allows us to engineer new materials and devices that operate on entirely different principles than the silicon based information technologies of today. Going beyond todays charge-based devices to those that use miniscule ionic currents to reversibly control the state of matter has the potential for new types of mobile devices. Using these devices and concepts in novel three-dimensional architectures could prevent the information technology industry from hitting a technology brick wall.
The researchers said that IBM scientists applied a positively charged ionic loquid electrolyte to vanadium dioxide, converting the material to a metallic state.
Just wait until Skynet converts to Islam.
” to reversibly control the state of matter “
As in to the level of creating Antimatter?
Computer chips would be the LEAST of that ability. Might wanna test that somewhere off planet guys..... ;)
Atomic... ionic, something to do with molecules or something...
“Inslating”???
Whutevr.
What could possibly go wrong?
I will believe it when they give me my 100Tb USB 3.0 thumb drive....
I don’t either. But the way they worded it made it seem like they perfected alchemy. So why not go all the way? ;)
Thanks LibWhacker.
That word must have some connection to sex, have yet to figure out what?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.