*NEWS*HP’S ALTERNATIVE TO TRANSISTORS

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Date: Sunday February 6, 2005 10:39:00 am
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    HP Propose Alternative to Transistors

    SAN JOSE,Calif. (Feb.O5)-Challenging a basic tenet of
    the semiconductor industry,researchers at Hewlett-Packard Co. have demonstrated
    a technology that could replace the transistor as the fundamental building block
    of all computers.

    The
    devices, called crossbar latches, could be made so small that thousands
    of them could fit across the diameter of a human hair,enabling the
    high-tech industry to continue to build ever-smaller computing devices
    that are less expensive than their predecessors.

    For years, engineers have been able to pack more and more
    smaller transistors onto a fingernail-size silicon chip. The rate of
    integration, first predicted by Intel Corp. co-founder Gordon Moore in 1965, has
    driven computer performance and prices for more than 30 years.

    But the pace of Moore’s Law can’t continue forever, and the
    high-tech industry has been scrambling to develop workarounds for the day –
    expected in a decade or so – when transistor dimensions become too small for the
    materials commonly used today.

    “If we’re going to extend Moore’s Law for another several
    decades, we’ve got to have an alternative strategy,” said Phil Kuekes, one of
    the paper’s authors at HP Labs. “This is the final piece of the puzzle in what
    HP has been putting together as such a strategy.”

    The smallest features of today’s silicon-based transistors
    are about 90 nanometers long, a nanometer being roughly one hundred-thousandth
    the width of a human hair. The crossbar latch, by comparison, can work in a
    space of about 2 to 3 nanometers.

    The HP research, reported in Tuesday’s Journal of Applied
    Physics, scraps the transistor entirely. In its place is basically a series of
    platinum wires crossed opposite directions. At the junctions are molecules that
    in the HP research happen to be steric acid.

    “It’s metal and molecules. Nothing else,” Kuekes said.
    “We’re getting away from the physics of silicon.”

    Like in a transistor, an electrical signal that passes
    through a crossbar latch is manipulated to perform logic functions. The latest
    research shows that the technology also can be used for amplifying a signal,
    allowing multiple functions to be applied.

    “The power of this device is not when it’s by itself. It’s
    when it glues together other pieces of logic,” said Duncan Stewart, another HP
    Labs scientist and study co-author. “As soon as you’re able to do that, we call
    that a computer.”

    The researchers have not glued together multiple crossbar
    latches, though they say it’s something they’re continuing to pursue. They
    expect it to be commercially viable as early as 2012. The latches are formed
    through a specialized stamping process for nano-sized imprints.

    They also must persuade an industry built on transistors
    that an alternative technology can be just as effective, said Stan Williams,
    director of Quantum Science Research at HP Labs and another of the paper’s
    co-authors.

    “There came to be a mantra that you have to have
    transistors to build computers,” he said. “A latch is a different way of
    achieving that same function, but it turns out it has significant advantages
    over a transistor.”

    The crossbar latch not only works at a much smaller scale
    than a transistor but also can do more, he added.

    “In order to do the same thing that a latch can do, you
    actually need many transistors,” Williams said.

    In fact, other researchers have been focused on building
    molecular transistors, which are much more challenging to build at such a small
    scale, said James C. Ellenbogen, principal scientist in the Nanosystems Group at
    the MITRE Corp.

    “This may enable the field to proceed toward nanoprocessor
    demonstrations and applications more rapidly and at lower cost,” he said.

    It also could prove to be less expensive to build because
    engineers can more easily work around defects that arise during manufacturing
    than with those that occur during silicon fabrication, where defects are avoided
    at great cost.

    But crossbar latches aren’t going to replace today’s
    silicon chips anytime soon. At first, they would likely be used for memory and
    later for specialized devices. They also will have to integrate with today’s
    silicon chips for the time being.

    “Transistors will continue to be used for years to come
    with conventional silicon circuits,” Kuekes said, “but this could someday
    replace transistors in computers, just as transistors replaced vacuum tubes and
    vacuum tubes replaced electromagnet relays before them.

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