HP Introduces Defect-Tolerant Nano Elements
versicherung writes "With the ever shrinking feature size in microelectronics it will soon be prohibitively expensive to manufacture defect-free nano elements. HP has come up with a new way to produce fault-tolerant microchips. Utilizing mathematical techniques borrowed from coding theory, HP will be able to produce those chips by using a cross-bar architecture and adding 50 percent more wires as an 'insurance policy,' to fabricate nano-electronic circuits with nearly perfect yields even though the probability of broken components will be high."
Brilliant deduction there.
My mom says I'm cool.
Actually most of this work has been going on throughout Carly's reign. She took over in '99, HP's first patent on the stuff was issued in 2000.
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HP Nanotech web page
And the design itself has already been covered here a few times...
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/02/
The research had probably been going on long before Carly arrived. The biggest connection you could draw between the two is, she didn't axe it during her reign...
-- *My* journal is more interesting than *yours*...
Silcon circuits most certainly do degrade over time, even in normal use. It just so happens that so far this has been "under control". But as technologists keep reducing the feature size, these effects will become much more important.
Several people in my team work in exactly this area of micro-electronics research by the way: how to optimally compensate for these (and other related) effects at the system/architecture level. Other research groups at the place where I work (we have 2 full featured cleanrooms of our own, just for research purposes) are part of the "gang" that causes these problems to grow in importance.
Linux user since early January 1992.