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Carbon Nanotube-Based NVRAM In 2-3 Years?

According to NanoWerk, UC Riverside researchers have come up with a memory device based on telescoping multi-walled carbon nanotubes. According to one of the researchers, 'This finding leads to a promising potential to build ultrafast high-density nonvolatile memory, up to 100 gigahertz or into the terahertz range" and a prototype could be demonstrated "in the next two to three years.' Similar devices from UCLA and Caltech based on bistable rotaxanes are farther along in being integrated into actual memory circuits, but tend to break after a fairly small number of position changes. Carbon nanotubes may promise more durable switches.

1 of 66 comments (clear)

  1. Of course! by NerveGas · · Score: 0, Redundant


        Just like that holographic storage that was going to replace hard drives "in 2-3 years"... almost a decade ago.

        That's not to say that this *won't* happen, just that it's yet another "We're going to change the world in a few years!" idea, which should really be a "We'll wake you up if anything ever becomes of this." sort of message.

    --
    Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.