Scientists have demonstrated for the first time that carbon nanotubes can
route electrical signals on a computer chip faster than traditional copper or
aluminium wires at speeds of up to 10GHz.
The University of California Irvine
scientists in The Henry Samueli School of Engineering said that the breakthrough
could lead to faster and more efficient computers, and improved wireless network
and cellular phone systems.
"Our prior research showed that nanotube transistors can operate at extremely
high frequencies, but the connections between the transistors were made out of
somewhat slower copper, thus forming a bottleneck for the electrical signals,"
said Peter Burke, assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer
science at UC Irvine.
"In this technology we show that nanotubes can also quickly route electronic
signals from one transistor to another, thus removing the bottleneck."
The researchers explained that electrical signals are routed at high speed
through virtually all modern electronic systems and through the airwaves in all
modern wireless systems.
"From now on, any time a nanotube device is used anywhere in the world in a
high-speed electronic device, computer, wireless network or telephone system,
people will benefit from this technology," added Burke.
A nanotube is commonly made from carbon and consists of a graphite sheet
seamlessly wrapped into a cylinder only a few nanometres wide. A nanometre is
one billionth of a metre, about the size of 10 atoms strung together.
Most of the layers in a modern semiconductor chip are dedicated to
interconnect wiring, making the material used, and its speed, extremely
important.
The semiconductor industry recently shifted from using aluminium to copper as
interconnects because copper carries electrical signals faster than aluminium.
Burke explained that, based on the latest experiments, changing the industry
from copper to nanotubes would provide an even larger performance advantage in
terms of speed.
Before such a shift could occur, however, nanotube technology would need to
be economical to manufacture, and require precise assembly, which scientists are
currently working on.
Having developed both high-speed nanotube interconnect technology and
high-speed nanotube transistor technology, the UC Irvine researchers hope to
integrate the two into an ultra-high-speed all-nanotube electronic circuit,
faster than any existing semiconductor technology.
The Army Research Office, the Office of Naval Research, the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency and the National Science Foundation provided funding
for the research, which took place at UC Irvine's Integrated Nanosystems
Research Facility in The Henry Samueli School of Engineering.
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