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IBM: self assembling vacuum chip insulation

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  • IBM: self assembling vacuum chip insulation

    Link....

    IBM says tiny chips are big breakthrough

    Self-assembling material creates insulation for wire


    IBM has found a way to use the designs of nature in building the next generation of powerful computer chips.

    The breakthrough marks the first time chips have been made with a self-assembling nanotechnology, using the same process that forms seashells and snowflakes, company officials said in interviews Wednesday in San Francisco.


    Scientists at IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose and its Yorktown, N.Y., laboratory developed a material with unique properties that can help create vacuum pockets around the miles of copper wires that run along a computer chip.

    The material, and the vacuums, will serve as insulation, preventing the chips from using too much energy and getting too hot. In addition, the chips will have a 35 percent increase in performance, maintaining the historic trend of semiconductors continually getting smaller and faster at the same time that their price drops.

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    "This is a greater insulator than anything that's around today," said Adalio Sanchez, general manager of IBM's global engineering solutions systems and technology group. "We think this is a major advance in this industry."
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    Often such breakthroughs are achievable only in a lab, but IBM said it already has computers running on the new chips, and that wide-scale manufacturing is expected by 2009 or 2010.

    "It's not just a research paper," said Dave Lammers, the director of Wesrch.com, a Web site operated by San Jose's VLSI Research for people in the semiconductor industry. "It's really pretty impressive. Everybody was pleasantly surprised. It should give some credibility to IBM's claim that they're not far behind Intel."

    IBM research partners AMD, Sony, Toshiba and Freescale will have rights to the new technology.

    Microprocessors have about 24 miles of copper wire running around a silicon chip the size of a thumbnail, IBM's Sanchez said. The wire is only 32 nanometers wide -- incredibly tiny, when you consider that a human hair is 80,000 nanometers wide. When data courses through those wires -- as computer users type e-mail and watch video online, for example -- the wires get hot. And when one wire gets hot, it heats up other wires.

    IBM's new material, known as a polymer, can be poured atop the wires, and then trillions of tiny holes "will turn it into Swiss cheese," analyst Brookwood said. The material and the vacuum provide the insulation.

    Because the chip is so tiny, conventional lithography made drilling the holes impossible.
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    Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 5 May 2007, 20:34.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

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