
New type of microchip created which not only moves information from left to right and back to front, but up and down as well.
New type of microchip created which not only moves information from left to right and back to front, but up and down as well.
We can actually see the data climbing this nano-staircase step by step.
Professor Russell Cowburn, lead researcher of the study from the Cavendish Laboratory, the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Physics
Scientists from the 探花直播 of Cambridge have created, for the first time, a new type of microchip which allows information to travel in three dimensions. Currently, microchips can only pass digital information in a very limited way 鈥 from either left to right or front to back. 探花直播research was published today, 31 January, in Nature.
Dr Reinoud Lavrijsen, an author on the paper from the 探花直播 of Cambridge, said: 鈥淭oday鈥檚 chips are like bungalows 鈥 everything happens on the same floor. We鈥檝e created the stairways allowing information to pass between floors.鈥
Researchers believe that in the future a 3D microchip would enable additional storage capacity on chips by allowing information to be spread across several layers instead of being compacted into one layer, as is currently the case.
For the research, the Cambridge scientists used a special type of microchip called a spintronic chip which exploits the electron鈥檚 tiny magnetic moment or 鈥榮pin鈥 (unlike the majority of today鈥檚 chips which use charge-based electronic technology). Spintronic chips are increasingly being used in computers, and it is widely believed that within the next few years they will become the standard memory chip.
To create the microchip, the researchers used an experimental technique called 鈥榮puttering鈥. They effectively made a club-sandwich on a silicon chip of cobalt, platinum and ruthenium atoms. 探花直播cobalt and platinum atoms store the digital information in a similar way to how a hard disk drive stores data. 探花直播ruthenium atoms act as messengers, communicating that information between neighbouring layers of cobalt and platinum. Each of the layers is only a few atoms thick.
They then used a laser technique called MOKE to probe the data content of the different layers.听 As they switched a magnetic field on and off they saw in the MOKE signal the data climbing layer by layer from the bottom of the chip to the top.听 They then confirmed the results using a different measurement method.
Professor Russell Cowburn, lead researcher of the study from the Cavendish Laboratory, the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Physics, said: 鈥淓ach step on our spintronic staircase is only a few atoms high. I find it amazing that by using nanotechnology not only can we build structures with such precision in the lab but also using advanced laser instruments we can actually see the data climbing this nano-staircase step by step.
鈥淭his is a great example of the power of advanced materials science. Traditionally, we would use a series of electronic transistors to move data like this. We鈥檝e been able to achieve the same effect just by combining different basic elements such as cobalt, platinum and ruthenium. This is the 21st century way of building things 鈥 harnessing the basic power of elements and materials to give built-in functionality.鈥
探花直播research was funded by the European Research Council, the Isaac Newton Trust, and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO).
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