Breakthrough Grows Graphene On Silicon Substrate 60
eldavojohn writes "A new paper entitled Epitaxial Graphene on Silicon toward Graphene-Silicon Fusion Electronics published by a group of physicists at Tohoku University in Japan has demonstrated that they can grow graphene on a silicon substrate and pair that technique with conventional lithography to create a graphene-on-silicon field effect transistor. For quite sometime we've been discussing the supermaterial graphene being used like silicon improving everything from memory density to transistors. Given this demonstration, are we witnessing the start of a new era in electronics or are there more hurdles to clear before the manufacturers adopt this fabrication process and embrace graphene?"
Parent is Offtopic (Score:1, Interesting)
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The real breakthrough in computing will be computers that can replicate themselves.
Wonderful. Then we won't just have other humans competing for resources, but the damned robots as well! I can see it now, a new twist on the "war against the humans" theme, not because robots decided we were inherently evil and can't be trusted - but in order to ensure their access to resources.
But of course we humans ARE devious and crafty. I can't wait for one robot to announce:
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The real breakthrough in computing will be computers that can replicate themselves.
Wonderful. Then we won't just have other humans competing for resources, but the damned robots as well!
Yeah, but they don't fight for the same resources...
Robots don't want meat, arable land, pure water, etc, etc (or, at least, I hope they won't)
Re:Self-replicating computers (Score:4, Funny)
Robots don't want meat, arable land, pure water, etc, etc (or, at least, I hope they won't)
Oh god, I hope they don't want to round up the humans and get us to do the work for them, so that they can lounge around all day and drink beer!
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But they will want power, and metal "maybe".
Re:Self-replicating computers (Score:4, Funny)
But they will want power, and metal "maybe".
Well, ok the robots can have Manowar then...
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I can't wait for one robot to announce: Alumino-Lent Green is made out of Robots!
Yeah, well, the day we build the Charltron Hestonator, the Robot Doomsday has already arrived.
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A chocolate stick [lushlee.com], of course.
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see http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/449651/pencil [britannica.com]
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Before the crappy "So it's like a pencil? I guess erasing the RAM will make eraser dust everywhere in the computer" jokes start flowing in, it's graphene [wikipedia.org] not graphite [wikipedia.org].
Graphene and graphite are the same thing. Graphite consists of multiple single sheets of graphene.
Super! (Score:4, Funny)
"Breakthrough Grows Graphene On Silicon Substrate"? I'm calling everyone I know with the news. In fact, I'm writing my congressman to demand a new three day holiday: "National Graphene On Silicon Substrate Day".
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NGOSS Day? Sounds like a good name to me :P
Re:Super! (Score:4, Funny)
I've been trying to write a poem about the authors of this paper, but I'm having trouble with the scansion.
"GRAPHene on SILicon SUBstrate" is trochaic triameter, and lends itself to the ballad quatrain, e.g.
Has ever there been a more wonderful thing,
than graphene on silicon substrate?
I'll bet Hyun-Chul Kang doesn't mind it a bit,
that in college he wasn't a "fun date".
I've had to drop several of the original 11 authors (HIroKAzu FUkiDOme, RYOta TAkaHASHi, and AKiTASHi YUshiGOe) whose names take up an entire quadrameter line and are hard to rhyme.
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Wow this poem has inspired me to write a Haiku.
Haikus are easy.
But sometimes they don't make sense.
Refrigerator.
That is all.
My Haiku (Score:1)
"...semi-conductive..."
I scribble my results down,
with graphite pencil.
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"It's like...a cosmic rebirth!"
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Well, that is a problem. I started to call all my friends, then I realized I don't have any.
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October is already "Graphene On Silicon Substrate Month"
Don't you ever go to any of the "Graphene Grope" parties?
Don't you hang decorative substrate sheets all over the house and on your front door?
Of course, it's irritating when the trash pick-up and mail are delayed because of the GOSS Holidays, but hey... it's a such a great tradition for the kids...
Not so great (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not so great (Score:4, Funny)
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True, though this would have been a huge breakthrough 1-2 months ago. The paper you linked to was only published on Dec 30 of last year. Prior to that, we had a method to produce tiny flakes of graphene that required an inordinate amount of time, effort, luck, and scotch tape.
Also, graphene would be a lot more useful to us if we could produce it inexpensively on a silicon substrate. The copper substrate stuff is a huge step forward, but we'd ideally like to end up being able to directly grow graphene on
The answer is yes. (Score:2, Insightful)
A. Yes.
Why are these two things considered by the submitter to be mutually exclusive?? It is both a potential new era of electronics AND there is the potential that there are hurdles to clear. What's the purpose of trying to editorialize a press release?
What's the strength of Graphene? (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean isn't graphene basically unrolled carbon nano-tubes? And aren't carbon nano-tubes supposed to be very very (tensile) strong, strong enough to be considered to be usable as the raw material for a practical space elevator?
If (as another poster claims) 30+" sheets of the stuff can be made, could this stuff (even if slightly impure and not good enough for nano-electronics) be very useful for ultra-lightweight armor, fuel tanks (for a single stage to orbit vehicle), bikeframes... even a space elevator? Or is the fact that it is only a 2D mesh of carbon atoms (as opposed to a 3D "lattice" like diamond) make it substantially weaker?
I read somewhere that a layer of graphene a single atom thick is able to hold back 1 atm. of pressure. Isn't that roughly equivalent to a tissue paper holding back the ocean at some very deep depth (I know this is very imprecise! :)
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According to this [unitconverterpro.com] 1 atmosphere = 33.932446552 feet of water.
I KNOW THAT! (Score:3, Insightful)
Or at least I thought I did, (for some reason I thought 1 atmosphere = 32ft. water :)
What I meant to say is that think of the relative strength of a mesh A SINGLE ATOM THICK (sorry for the caps, I don't know how to do italics) being able to hold back the incredible number of molecular impacts one atmosphere of pressure implies. If you layered this mesh to be much much thicker so that it actually was macroscopic in thickness (like a tissue paper) it would be millions (billions? trillions?) of atoms thick.
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Re:What's the strength of Graphene? (Score:4, Informative)
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Thanks for the response! Unfortunately I still don't understand, I'm not a chemist/theoretical chemist/physicist (obviously). I didn't think about the fact that graphite isn't good for armor (good point!). Why not? Is it that there are too many defects so it fragments on a nano scale? Or is because there is no "glue" between the layers and that makes them slide around too much (I remember enough chemistry to know that's how pencils work!).
I never knew that there could be a difference between unit thick
Re:What's the strength of Graphene? (Score:4, Interesting)
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After all, graphite is just this stuff layered up millions of times
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't graphite very small fragments of graphene layered on each other? My understanding was that writing with a pencil is just rubbing off the little flecks of graphene. If you layered larger sheets, even a few square centimetres, and layered them more regularly, wouldn't you get something stronger?
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If you made a sheet of graphene the thickness of tissue paper, it could possible hold back the ocean. I don't know about straight up graphene, but a sheet of graphene oxide has a tensile modulus of 32 gigapascals.
On the other hand, you can snap it by folding sharply.
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2006 called... (Score:5, Informative)
Oh hey, 2006 called, and they want their science [sciencemag.org] back.
This field moves *fast* and the epitaxial technique is already being commercialized by IBM (perhaps others too, but IBM isn't hiding it). It's already moving out of science and into manufacturing (for what purpose, I'm not sure anyone knows). Meanwhile, cheaper and larger scale methods to grow graphene have been invented, and are nearly perfected.
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The Science article is about graphene on silicon carbide. This article is about graphene on elemental silicon. Very different.
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No it's not. The new article is also about graphene on SiC, they just stuck the silicon carbide to a silicon wafer. This does not make the process cheaper or easier.
Re:2006 called... (Score:5, Informative)
The difference between the 2006 work and this one is that the present researchers are not growing graphene on a silicon carbide substrate, but on a silicon substrate with a silicon carbide thin film on top. This may make it a little more commercially feasible.
However, the trouble with the epitaxial technique is that no one (AFAIK) has successfully demonstrated a quantum Hall effect [wikipedia.org] in these graphene sheets, unlike the sheets made using the usual "scotch tape" methods. So there's some doubt about whether what they are getting is really graphene. I don't think the present work addresses this problem either.
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The real problem is that the band gap is still zero. These things have an on/off ratio of the order of 10 or less, orders of magnitude worse than Si, the material they are supposed to supplement.
Why is this significant? (Score:2)
The original posting is lacking something very important - an explanation of why this is important. What benefits, if any, are there to being able to do this? Will it lead to faster or more power efficient processors? Will it result in tastier waffles? Will it bring about world peace?
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I hope it's the waffles!