亚洲成在人线av丨毛片免费视频丨日本护士╳╳╳hd少妇丨亚洲欧美综合区丁香五月小说丨伊人久久大香线蕉av最新

Market Trend
Magnetic lock makes for mutable chips
12 years ago Clicks

Magnetic lock makes for mutable chips.
Software can transform a computer from a word processor to a number cruncher to a video telephone. But the underlying hardware is unchanged. Now, a type of transistor that can be switched with magnetism instead of electricity could make circuitry malleable too, leading to more efficient and reliable gadgets, from smart phones to satellites.

Transistors, the simple switches at the heart of all modern electronics, generally use a tiny voltage to toggle between ‘on’ and ‘off’. The voltage approach is highly reliable and easy to miniaturize, but has its disadvantages. First, keeping the voltage on requires power, which drives up the energy consumption of the microchip. Second, transistors must be hard-wired into the chips and can’t be reconfigured, which means computers need dedicated circuitry for all their functions.

A research group based at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) in Seoul, South Korea, has developed a circuit that may get around these problems. The device, described in a paper published on Nature’s website on 30 January, uses magnetism to control the flow of electrons across a minuscule bridge of the semiconducting material indium antimonide. It is “a new and interesting twist on how to implement a logic gate”, says Gian Salis, a physicist at IBM’s Zurich Research Laboratory in Switzerland.

The bridge has two layers: a lower deck with an excess of positively charged holes and an upper deck filled predominantly with negatively charged electrons. Thanks to the unusual electronic properties of the indium antimonide, the researchers can control the flow of electrons across the bridge using a perpendicular magnetic field. When they set the field in one direction, electrons are steered away from the positive bottom deck and flow freely. When the magnetic field is flipped, the electrons crash into the lower deck and recombine with the holes — effectively turning the switch off (see ‘Magnetic lock’).

maglock

The ability of a magnetic logic gate to hold the switch on or off without a voltage “could lead to great reduction of energy consumption”, says study co-author Jin Dong Song, a physicist at KIST. Even more impressively, the magnetic switches “can be handled like software”, he says, by simply flipping the field to enable or disable a circuit. Thus a mobile phone could, for example, reprogram a bit of its microcircuitry to process video while its user watched a clip on YouTube, then switch the chip back to signal processing to take a phone call. This could greatly reduce the volume of circuitry needed inside the phone.

Such reconfigurable logic could be invaluable in satellites, adds Mark Johnson of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington DC, a co-author of the paper. If part of a chip failed in orbit, another sector could simply be reprogrammed to take over. “You’ve healed the circuit and you’ve done it from Earth,” he says.

To really catch on, however, the magnetic lock would have to be integrated with existing silicon-based technologies. That may not be easy. For one thing, indium antimonide, the semiconductor crucial to the circuits, doesn’t lend itself well to manufacturing processes used to make modern electronics, according to Junichi Murota, a researcher working with nanoelectronics at Tohoku University in Japan. But Johnson says that it may eventually be possible to build similar bridges with silicon.

Integrating the miniature magnets needed to control the devices into a normal chip wouldn’t be easy either. Companies should be able to solve these challenges, but only if they decide the devices are worthwhile, says Salis. At the moment, he adds, it is not clear whether the devices will perform well at the sizes needed for a practical chip — much smaller than the micrometre dimensions of the prototypes.

But Johnson notes that magnetism is already catching on in circuit design: some advanced devices are beginning to use a magnetic version of random access memory, a type of memory that has historically been built only with conventional transistors. “I think a shift is already under way,” he says.

 

Professional electric locks manufacturers-YLI ElecAll rights reserved,Email:yli@yli.cn
Login
Register
主站蜘蛛池模板: а√中文在线资源库| 国产精选在线观看| 午夜成年视频| 伊人久久无码中文字幕| av天天色| 波多野结衣 黑人| 人人狠狠久久亚洲综合88| 亚洲国产精品久久一线不卡| 日韩中文字幕中文无码久本草| 操碰av| 国产麻豆md传媒视频| 人澡人人澡人人澡欧美| 中文字幕aⅴ人妻一区二区| 无遮挡裸体免费视频尤物| 国内精品久久久久久无码不卡 | 老司机午夜福利视频 | 亚洲 欧美 变态 另类 综合| 亚洲另类欧美综合久久图片区| 久久婷婷国产麻豆91天堂| 国产69精品久久久久9999apgf | 亚洲色大成网站www永久一区| 日韩av无码精品一二三区| 无码午夜人妻一区二区三区不卡视频 | 亚洲视频在线观看| 香蕉伊蕉伊中文视频在线| 日本视频高清一道一区| 91性色| 国产精品一区二区无线| 亚洲精品网站日本xxxxxxx| 日本熟妇大屁股人妻| www五月天com| 国产精品免费看久久久| 91免费高清视频| 国产婷婷色一区二区三区在线| 九七人人爽| 日韩精品久久久肉伦网站| 亚洲无线观看国产精品| 国产一级做a爱片|