Memristor — 4th Basic Element of Circuits 291
esocid writes "Researchers at HP Labs have solved a decades-old mystery by proving the existence of a fourth basic element in integrated circuits that could make it possible to develop computers that turn on and off like an electric light. The memristor — short for memory resistor — could make it possible to develop far more energy-efficient computing systems with memories that retain information even after the power is off, so there's no wait for the system to boot up after turning the computer on. It may even be possible to create systems with some of the pattern-matching abilities of the human brain. Leon Chua, a distinguished faculty member at the University of California at Berkeley, initially theorized about and named the element in an academic paper published 37 years ago. Chua argued that the memristor was the fourth fundamental circuit element, along with the resistor, capacitor and inductor, and that it had properties that could not be duplicated by any combination of the other three elements."
Great! (Score:2, Funny)
Just like a human brain? (Score:5, Funny)
As far as I know, human brains don't retain much information when the power is turned off and there's usually some trouble after the power is restored. Furthermore, I'm not sure how power-down information retention relates to pattern-matching abilities.
But what to I know, I had my brain off last night.
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It's sort of difficult to restore power to that type of powering off of the brain. And when you do, I hear that the host's diet dramatically changes [theonion.com].
Re:Just like a human brain? (Score:5, Funny)
No, I meant my brain was really OFF. I'm a Zombie.
[ Where did you say you lived? ]
To call it the forth element... (Score:2, Insightful)
Basically you have Ohm's law which is v =Ri. There is a component for each variable: Capacitors for voltage, inductors for current, resistors for resistance. It is all there, in nice little differential equations.
Yes, this is a great discovery. But please stop with the sensationalist headlines. This is getting out of hand.
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Re:To call it the forth element... (Score:4, Informative)
Ohms law does not describe the basic componets of a circuit, it only provides a simply way to determine simple information about a simple circuit (Mainly a energy source, and a resistor). It has no room for capacitors or inductors. You need much higher math for that.
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V = (R) i + (1/(s C)) i + (s L) i
This "memristor" is actually a function of the history of the electric flux going through the circuit:
V = M(q(t)) i, where M is the memristance
M(q(t)) = d Phi(t) / d q, where q is the electric charge particle
Phi = electric flux = integral of electric field E over an area A
Umm... what? (Score:2)
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What a lame fifth element. There's not even a Leeloo.
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From the paper itself (Score:5, Informative)
As for the others, they are components. For instance, a resistor R fits in dv = Rdi. A capacitor C fits in as dq = Cdv. An inductor as dphi = Ldi, and a memristor fills in the missing dphi = Mdq.
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Instantaneously, a memristor behaves exactly like a resistor.
Tim.
Re:From the paper itself (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe a Thixotropic [wikipedia.org] object like the viscocity of ketchup? It is an object that changes its resistance to flow over time with repect to the force of the flow that was previously applied.
The more force you apply to ketchup, the easier it is to pour. A memristor would be like the more electric flux you apply through the area of the device, the more/less resistance current will flow through the device.
-- Scott
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For capacitors the equivalent law is i = C (dV/dt), and for inductors it's V = L (di/dt).
You can combine them all for an RLC circuit, but the result isn't Ohm's law.
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Before the flaming even starts I'll repeat that my knowledge on either physics or nanotechnology is limited. Perhap
Zero boot time (Score:2)
TRS-80 Color Computer, for example boots instantly since it runs from ROM unless you are using OS-9.
The TRS-80 Model 100 keeps its file system in RAM and has a separate NiCD to backup the RAM. It boots instantly. The backup lasts months in my experience (even today with old NiCd's).
And any computer can simply be left on... no boot time.
So there's nothing here that cannot be done with a m
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But to conclusively disprove your point, just look at the Palm Pilot. It turns on instantly too.
Boot time is not a necessity.
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Negative. Palm Pilots do NOT boot instantly. Reset one, and see how long it takes to boot. Those machines hibernate. Ditto for their predecessor, the GRiDPad 2390, which was where Palm Computing got their start. It ran PC-GEOS.
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http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/univac-ntds.html [ed-thelen.org]
I don't get it (Score:2)
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The bizarre characterization of this as a discovery instead of an invention originates in the paper itself.
... on the flip side (Score:2)
Would this also inspire new forms of malware/viruses/trojans that persist in memory even after the system is powered off?
And another thing... forensic computer evidence. I guess you could sort of tell what the user was last doing before they turned off t
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Doesn't matter.
If memory is settable -- and that is certainly a requirement -- then it's possible to set it all to zero at the flick of a switch. Hence, rebooting.
Also: it's possible to recover the state of current RAM a surprising amount of time after the user switched off the machine. (Well, okay, tens of seconds, at least).
I suppose if it became a problem you could always encrypt it on powerdown...
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Huh? How does one do a "processor reset" and what problems would that fix? If a system's unresponsive, cold booting clears the memory, restarts any misbehaving processes, reinitializes hardware devices, tosses virtual memory etc. There are lots of things that can get screwed up in a running system. Sometimes it's hardware, sometimes it's software and sometimes it's some weird combination of both.
Nuke it from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
Reminds me of a joke... (Score:3, Funny)
The engineer wakes up and smells smoke. He goes out into the hallway and sees a fire, so he fills a trash can from his room with water and douses the fire. He goes back to bed.
Later, the physicist wakes up and smells smoke. He opens his door and sees a fire in the hallway. He walks down the hall to a fire hose and after calculating the flame velocity, distance, water pressure, trajectory, etc. extinguishes the fire with the minimum amount of water and energy needed.
Later, the mathematician wakes up and smells smoke. He goes to the hall, sees the fire and then the fire hose. He thinks for a moment and then exclaims, "Ah, a solution exists!" and then goes back to bed.
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Why would he not use an accelerant ?
Does this hotel not have smoke alarms ?
And why would none of them call the fire dept. and / or report the fire to the hotel management ?
Your story is full of holes.
I'll admit I don't understand the classification (Score:3, Insightful)
Or maybe they're "basic" because every circuit (that's not superconducting), whether or not it contains semiconductors or more exotic stuff, has some amount resistance, capacitance, and inductance. Even if you don't want it, in which case you call it "parasitic". I don't think you're going to accidentally create two separate layers of titanium oxide.
So while I get why this discovery is totally awesome, I don't get what they mean by "fourth fundamental circuit element". Anyone got the skinny?
Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:2)
Yes but please don't tell anyone. I'm having a hard enough time trying to get girls to like me as it is.
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Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:5, Informative)
A transistor may be approximated as a variable current source. Similarly, many applications of transistors are as "active" devices, which supply external power to the circuit being considered.
A diode is effectively nothing more than a voltage-controlled switch. In a DC circuit, it simply passes current through (with a small voltage drop that can be approximated by an inline negative voltage source).
Likewise, all transistors can be abstractly considered as networks of diodes. This is why they are inherently binary devices, and why computers "think" in binary.
The classical circuit elements (Resistor, Capacitor, Inductor) each fundamentally affect the electromagnetic properties of the electrons flowing through said circuit.
Resistors impede the flow of current; a capacitor is a current "bucket" that also blocks DC signals in AC circuits; and an inductor builds up a sort of inertia for the flow of current, through the creation of a magnetic field.
The distinction is hazy, but I think I can see it where it comes from.... when a diode/transistor does something, it affects of the "layout" of the circuit, rather than directly affecting the electrons flowing through it.
The memristor is extremely interesting, as it blurs the line between analogue components and solid-state devices, and provides exciting possibilities for the development of analogue computing and data storage.
Even more exciting is that they can already be made smaller than transistors, and two can be combined to create a device that functions analogous to a transistor.
Considering that we're quickly approaching the limits of Silicon-based technology, this invention may very well offer the key to the true "next generation" of electronic devices, and may very well be as significant to our generation as the transistor was to the previous. This is Nobel Prize-worthy stuff we're talking about.
Kudos to HP for supporting "true" R&D. They most definitely will be reaping the benefits of this one for years to come.
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Not quite correct. A transistor does directly affect the electrons that flow through it. I'm particularly thinking of MOSFETs, which I work with. There's a gate that directly affects how much current will flow through the channel.
I think the distinction has to do with linearizing the
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Inductors and capacitors affect a circuit over time. As they are affected more, they produce more effect, and vice versa. They have a sort of memory, but it's usually short term and is the sort of thing that is "used" by the circuit immediately. They "change after awhile".
Transistors and diodes are different in that they cause distinctly different behavi
Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:2)
Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:2)
I think what the fundamental elements have in common is that they have a linear transfer function, whereas transistors and diodes are non-linear.
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Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:5, Informative)
There are four fundamental circuit variables; current, voltage, charge, and flux.
We can define the relationships between charge and current and between flux and voltage. (charge as an integral of current, flux as an integral of voltage over time)
A resistor provides a function to relate voltage and current.
A capacitor provides a function to relate charge and voltage.
An inductor provides a function to relate flux and current.
Until now we did not know how to construct a passive device which would provide a function relating charge and flux. The only remaining combination of these fundamental variables.
Mod parent up. (Score:2)
Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:4, Informative)
Great Scott! (Score:2, Informative)
So what you're saying is that it's sorta like a capacitor, but instead of voltage, its function operates on flux.
How many gigawatts can it handle?
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I thought that only moving charges, i.e. current, could produce magnetic flux. Is there another method of magnetic flux production going on, here? If it is still flux caused by moving charges, how is it different than the inductor?
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Re:I'll admit I don't understand the classificatio (Score:2, Informative)
At least that's what my quick Googling on the subject turned up.
Good news, everybody! (Score:2)
Another grand name from the creator of the finglonger.
"proved the existence" ?? (Score:2)
Repeat after me: the researchers constructed a membristor.
Somehow, I don't think these scientists really care about the abstract existence of memristors. Moreover, you can't prove the existence of something that didn't exist before you started. You might be able to proved the feasibility of such devices, but only in mathematics it may be appropriate to say you "proved the existence" of something when you actually have a construction.Re: (Score:2)
Actually, they did not construct it, they proved that it can be constructed using some special properties of nano-particles.
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4 down, 1 to go... (Score:3, Funny)
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the four fundamental elements (Score:2)
New Scientist link with some more information (Score:2, Informative)
This is very interesting stuff. I wonder if these will ever be produced for amateur use, or if they'll only ever find their way into DRAM and such..
Another link with yet more information (EETimes) (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Another link with yet more information (EETimes (Score:2)
I'd love to hear comments about that.
Call me old quaint (Score:2)
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Good: You're trying to recognize privacy problems.
Bad: You apparently don't understand the problem well enough to differentiate problems from non-problems.
More information (Score:2)
You'd think the article would link to it.
Advantage over Flash RAM? (Score:2)
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I also wonder if something like this could be used, say, in the manufacture of LED displays where each pixel has dedicated state information. Then we could send packetized bursts of change informat
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It's slow. It doesn't behave like RAM. It's also got a max number of writes typically expressed in MAX-number of erase cycles.
Don't know much all the PROMS, but the ones that I'm familiar with are slow.
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What I don't understand is the reason why it cou
A much better article (Score:2)
Discussion of why a memristor is new, and more about how it works.
What do they mean by basic??? (Score:2)
And if we're cheating
Resistivity? (Score:2)
Resistance of metals can increase with the temperature of the metal (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resistivity [wikipedia.org]). With that, you could try this at home. Take a length of wire, and thermally insulate it. Put a lot of current through it to heat it up. Wait. Read the resistance of the wire later on. The resistance of the wire now is slightly higher than it was (resistivity is rather small, and you would probably only
Am I missing something? (Score:2)
When a current is applied to one, the resistance of the other changes.
Now, if I'm correct:
A) This requires current to flow through the first wire, so where's the memory?
B) Aside from the probably-more-linear relationship, how is this different from JFET's or BJT's?
I mean, the transistor is a device where you run a current or voltage to point A, changing the resistance between points B and C. Can someone explain the difference?
The difference (Score:2)
Non-linear? (Score:2)
Fourth basic element? (Score:2)
Imagine the possibilities once our computers can remember information! Oh, wait...
Reinventing the wheel? (Score:2)
Nature research abstract (Score:2)
The missing memristor found [nature.com]
Dmitri B. Strukov1, Gregory S. Snider1, Duncan R. Stewart1 & R. Stanley Williams1
Anyone who ever took an electronics laboratory class will be familiar with the fundamental passive circuit elements: the resistor, the capacitor and the inductor. However, in 1971 Leon Chua reasoned from symmetry arguments that there should be a fourth fundamental element, which he called a memristor (short for memory resistor)1. Although he showed that such an element has many interesting and valuable circuit properties, until now no one has presented either a useful physical model or an example of a memristor. Here we show, using a simple analytical example, that memristance arises naturally in nanoscale systems in which solid-state electronic and ionic transport are coupled under an external bias voltage. These results serve as the foundation for understanding a wide range of hysteretic current-voltage behaviour observed in many nanoscale electronic devices2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 that involve the motion of charged atomic or molecular species, in particular certain titanium dioxide cross-point switches20, 21, 22.
Here's the final paragraph of the research paper, which discusses some of the implications:
The rich hysteretic i-v characteristics detected in many thin-film, two-terminal devices can now be understood as memristive behaviour defined by coupled equations of motion: some for (ionized) atomic degrees of freedom that define the internal state of the device, and others for the electronic transport. This behaviour is increasingly relevant as the active region in many electronic devices continues to shrink to a width of only a few nanometres, so even a low applied voltage corresponds to a large electric field that can cause charged species to move. Such dopant or impurity motion through the active region can produce dramatic changes in the device resistance. Including memristors and memristive systems in integrated circuits has the potential to significantly extend circuit functionality as long as the dynamical nature of such devices is understood and properly used. Important applications include ultradense, semi-non-volatile memories and learning networks that require a synapse-like function.
There's also a Nature News and Views [nature.com], but I think that might also need a subscription.
Meh. What a shitty name. (Score:2)
How about "flasistor" or "resistash"? I know! "Storistor"!! Yeah, that's the ticket!
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Insanely expensive prototypes with virtually no functionality in modern use, probably 4 to 10 years.
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IBM discovered GMR and that was nearly universally used in hard drives within ten years.
Dangit... (Score:2)
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Of course, to "Read" this stuff, you have to pass current through it to measure its resistance... so then you have to refresh it back to state... not sure how serious the power savings can be compared to simply improving the power required for other memory devices there.
The simplicity of DRAM, with the lack of need for a refresh and therefore hopefully the speed of SRAM but with the ability to store data with the power off like NVRAM.
Sounds like it should be a faster and better alternative to DRAM, Flash RAM, SRAM, and NVRAM... and probably cheaper than DRAM (no need for refreshing should simplify even those devices.)
analog memory (Score:5, Informative)
The other amazing thing about memristors is how small they are. The articles state that you can emulate a transistor by connecting a few memristors, and that transistor is smaller than any we have today. Also it states that the memristor actually performs better at smaller sizes. This really is neat stuff.
The above post explains memristors well (Score:2)
Your post on the other hand actually explains the difference and deserves an 'informative.'
Re:The above post explains memristors well (Score:5, Interesting)
Given that this memristor looks like to be using very little power, can be scaled down very well and can be used both as storage and to build transistors - I'm pretty excited about this. Yeah, there are other attempts at non-volatile ram, but they are either slow (flash), cannot be written to many times (flash), expensive (a lot of flash alternatives) or just simply too energy consuming, the memristors should bring in some nice competition into the field, since the articles specifically state that it doesn't generate much heat at all, compared to currently existing other technologies, it can be made to change state faster than they could measure(!) in the lab and it can be repeated many times. So, the only part that is left is whether it is economically feasible to mass-produce these. I'm guessing it shouldn't be a very large problem either given the relative simplicity of this discovery.
Re:Leakage Current? (Score:4, Informative)
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Most inexpensive chip processes involve using blue and UV light to effectively (with chemical baths and deposition treatments) etch the surface of the chip into the correct shape and size. The biggest limitation here is that the light is around 300nm. When you're working significantly smaller than that, etching with this light is not as effective. Using higher frequency light can break down the materials (bath
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I think where you're really going astray is in assuming that a system which doesn't typically need to perform a full reboot would somehow be incapable of doing so; you even imply OS developers might forget that's a requirement, which is a huge insult to every OS developer. Having a system be able to boot itself from a clean slate (as it would have to for a new install, replacement of memristor-RAM sticks etc.) is not only a blindingly obvious requirement, but code that would be required anyway to boot the
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According to their description, it's a memory cell that retains information without needing power. In other words, non-volatile RAM. It actually (according to their description) looks pretty darn similar to FeRAM.
That's great and all, but how does this make the memristor a fourth basic element of electricity, after the resistor, inductor and capacitor? It sounds like something far more high level than that, along the lines of a transistor. I know I certainly don't regard a DRAM or SRAM cell as a basic
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A memristor only varies the resistivity from one of the wires, which effectively isolates the two circuits. This cannot be effectively be achieved with resistors, capacitors, or inductors. So, the memristor is actually a "resistivity transistor", which happens to have memory included.
A practical application for this would
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You have described a bipolar transistor. However, with field effect transistors, there is no current between the gate (base) and the source/drain (collector/emitter). In the case of a bipolar transistor, the emitter/collector current is controlled by the base/emitter current, whereas the source/drain current of a FET is
Re:Sure, it's neat (Score:4, Funny)
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*blink* *blink*
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This article on wired's site talks about that: http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/04/scientists-prov.html [wired.com]
In short - it's going to be a while
might, might, might, could, could, could (Score:3, Insightful)
We've had Non-volatile state storage for ages (eg. FeRAM and floating gates (as used in flash) and battery backed up RAM). State storage is only part of the picture.
W
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You'd want to be able to store a state and figure out what the state is without changing the state.
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Not for long.