Wonder, what would happen when devices with tera hurtz clock speed hit the 
market.


>From the web page
http://www.rochester.edu/news/show.php?id=2585

Computer designers at the University of Rochester are going ballistic.

"Everyone has been trying to make better transistors by modifying current 
designs, but what we really need is the next paradigm," says Quentin Diduck, 
a
graduate student at the University who thought up the radical new design. 
"We've gone from the relay, to the tube, to semiconductor physics. Now we're
taking the next step on the evolutionary track."

That next step goes by the imposing name of "Ballistic Deflection 
Transistor," and it's as far from traditional transistors as tubes. Instead 
of running
electrons through a transistor as if they were a current of water, the 
ballistic design bounces individual electrons off deflectors as if playing a 
game
of atomic billiards.

Though today's transistor design has many years of viability left, the 
amount of heat these transistors generate and the electrical "leaks" in 
their ultra-thin
barriers have already begun to limit their speed. Research groups around the 
world are investigating strange new designs to generate ways of computing
at speeds unthinkable with today's chips. Some of these groups are working 
on similar single-electron transistors, but these designs still compute by 
starting
and stopping the flow of electrons just like conventional designs. But the 
Ballistic Deflection Transistor adds a new twist by bouncing the electrons 
into
their chosen trajectories-using inertia to redirect for "free," instead of 
wrestling the electrons into place with brute energy.

Researchers

Researchers Martin Margala, Yonathan Shapir, Paul Ampadu, and Marc Feldman 
are teaming together to develop the Ballistic Deflection Transistor 
technology.
(PHOTO CREDIT UR)

High-resolution photos available
(please include photo credit)

Such a chip would use very little power, create very little heat, be highly 
resistant to "noise" inherent in electronic systems, and should be easy to 
manufacture
with current technologies. All that would make it incredibly fast. The 
National Science Foundation is so impressed with the idea that it just 
granted the
University of Rochester team $1.1 million to develop a prototype.

"We've assembled a unique team to take on this chip," says Marc Feldman, 
professor of computer engineering at the University. "In addition to myself 
and
Quentin, we have a theoretical physicist, a circuit designer, and an expert 
in computer architecture. We're not just designing a new transistor, but a
new archetype as well, and as far as I know, this is the first time an 
architect has been involved in the actual design of the transistor on which 
the
entire architecture is built."

The team has already had some luck in fabricating a prototype. The ballistic 
transistor is a nano-scale structure, and so all but impossible to engineer
just a few years ago. Its very design means that this "large" prototype is 
already nearly as small as the best conventional transistor designs coming 
out
of Silicon Valley today. Feldman and Diduck are confident that the design 
will readily scale to much smaller dimensions.

There's one hurdle the team isn't quite as confident about: "We're talking 
about a chip speed measured in terahertz, a thousand times faster than 
today's
desktop transistors" Diduck says. "We have to figure out how to test it 
because there's no such thing as a terahertz oscilloscope!"

The Science Behind the Ballistics

The Ballistic Deflection Transistor (BDT) should produce far less heat and 
run far faster than standard transistors because it does not start and stop 
the
flow of its electrons the way conventional designs do. It resembles a 
roadway intersection, except in the middle of the intersection sits a 
triangular
block. From the "south" an electron is fired, as it approaches the 
crossroads, it passes through an electrical field that pushes the electron 
slightly
east or west. When the electron reaches the middle of the intersection, it 
bounces off one side of the triangle block and is deflected straight along 
either
the east or west roads. In this way, if the electron current travels along 
the east road, it may be counted as a zero, and as a one if it travels down
the west road.

A traditional transistor registers a "one" as a collection of electrons on a 
capacitor, and a "zero" when those electrons are removed. Moving electrons
on and off the capacitor is akin to filling and emptying a bucket of water. 
The drawback to this method is that it takes time to fill and empty that 
bucket.
That refill time limits the speed of the transistor-the transistors in 
today's laptops run at perhaps two gigahertz, meaning two billion refills 
every
second. A second drawback is that these transistors produce immense amounts 
of heat when that energy is emptied.

The BDT design should also be able to resist much of the electrical noise 
present in all electronic devices because the noise would only be present in 
the
electrical "steering" field, and calculations show the variations of the 
noise would cancel themselves out as the electron passes through.

The BDT is "ballistic" because it is made from a sheet of semiconductor 
material called a "2D electron gas," which allows the electrons to travel 
without
hitting impurities, which would impede the transistor's performance.

The BDT prototype was fabricated at the Cornell Nanofabrication Facility 
with the support provided by the Office of Naval Research.

The $1.1 million is an NSF Nanotechnology Integrated Research Team grant, 
which is only awarded to promising research. The team is comprised of Marc 
Feldman,
professor of electrical and computer engineering, Martin Margala and Paul 
Ampadu, assistant professors of electrical and computer engineering, and 
Yonathan
Shapir, professor of physics and astronomy.

About the University of Rochester

The University of Rochester (www.rochester.edu) is one of the nation's 
leading private universities. Located in Rochester, N.Y., the University 
gives students
exceptional opportunities for interdisciplinary study and close 
collaboration with faculty through its unique cluster-based curriculum. Its 
College of
Arts, Sciences, and Engineering is complemented by the Eastman School of 
Music, Simon School of Business, Warner School of Education, Laboratory for 
Laser
Energetics, and Schools of Medicine and Nursing.

PR 2585, MS 1020


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