New Findings On Graphene As a Conductor With IC Components 34
ClockEndGooner (1323377) writes Philadelphia's NPR affiliate, WHYY FM, reported today on their Newsworks program that a research team at the University of Pennsylvania have released their preliminary findings on the use of graphene as a conductor in the next generation of computer chips. From the article: "'It's very, very strong mechanically, and it is an excellent electronic material that might be used in future computer chips,' said Charlie Johnson, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania. ... Future graphene transistors, Johnson said, are likely to be only tens of atoms across."
OT: Queue the weekly /. stories ... (Score:1, Offtopic)
* Graphene "miracle" Monday
* BitCoin "scandal" Tuesday
* Microsoft "who-cares" Wednesday
* Apple "hipster iShiny" Thursday
* Interesting news on Friday
-- /grumpy-old-programmer
"Get off my LAN"
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Then leave.
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- Leave Slashdot on saturday
- Come back to Slashdot on sunday
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So you solution is to stick your head in the sand and ignore the problem? /sarcasm Great Advice. NOT.
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What problem? They post stories about what's going on in labs. You don't like that, so leave. Stop whining like a bitch and leave.
It's very simple.
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Actually I'm not familiar with that one. Link please?
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/*WHOOSH* programmer joke. Queue was intentional [slashdot.org]
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Man missuses word. claims it was a joke even though it would make no sense in the context. News at 11.
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What part of FIFO do you not understand??
bad summary (Score:1)
'It's very, very strong mechanically, and it is an excellent electronic material that might be used in future computer chips,'
That's not even the new findings, but reading the summary, you might think so. Rather than instantly place blame on the submitter I read the writeup quoted and a better quote would've been:
"Publishing in the journal Nano Letters, the group found that for such ribbons -- just five atoms wide -- each atom could handle approximately one microampere of current."
Or any one of a dozen sentences from the first page of the first link....
Graphene this, graphene that (Score:2)
It's been what, couple years since I heard of Graphene. It apparently could do anything bar French Fries... in theory.
Any mainstream or even military implementations yet?
Let me know when it does something, for real, in real life. So far, it kind of says in the labs.
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Wow, graphene can talk, too?
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Through drooling mouths of scientists.
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A) If you don't want to read about what's going on in a lab, go read CNN ad comment with those idiots.
B) There are several produce available right now and more are coming out all the time.
Stop complaining or go away.
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B) There are several produce available right now and more are coming out all the time.
Citation needed.
Wikipedia says otherwise: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... [wikipedia.org]
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Learn to use google.
https://head.com/g/us/graphene... [head.com]
http://www.vorbeck.com/graphen... [vorbeck.com]
Samsung has develop many phone models, but there aren't off the production line yet.
IT was made for the first time just 10 year ago. Now things are starting to come out, they have been demoed in real products outside the lab.
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Both those products are using a composite of graphene, just saying.
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Graphene is awesome! (Score:4, Insightful)
Except for when it comes to actually building stuff with it.
The potential is there, obviously... but compare to how long it took to roll some up into simple tubes in an economically acceptable manner (ie, nanotubes are only just getting some actual use). I'm sure graphene as a computer component will be totally awesome -- but not until someone finds an *easy* way to build it, at most only 100X the cost of the equivalent in silicon.
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Toy for slashdotters (Score:2)
Actually, that reminds me... earlier today I read that you can make some interesting stuff by microwaving some graphite [sciencedaily.com]. Apparently it's "just like popcorn".
Thanks for linking the paper (Score:4)
Well, that's a terrible summary. At least they linked to the actual paper.
Good on Charlie for getting all this press out of the paper. This is continuation of work started when I worked in his lab (thin graphene transistors can be made with e-beam lithography, that gets you a bandgap and you can actually think about making a digital transistor, this paper has better measurements and better e-beam lithography - there now you don't have to read either of the papers).
It's not clear that any of this stuff will ever be used as actual digital logic. I think it's more likely to see commercialization as an analog transistor in a sensor (reason #1 - no e-beam litho required). Someone from Charlie's group will likely be part of making active graphene electronics work out. He's got former students or postdocs at Intel and IBM, and there are at least two of us with graphene based startup companies. So, we're working on making graphene electronics something other than an academic curiosity.
Is it just me? (Score:1)