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Intel prepares for next 20 years of chip making

Intel prepares for next 20 years of chip making

By:  Tom Krazit  On: 24 Oct 2004 For: IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau) Creator

Intel Corp. drew the curtain Friday on some of its future research projects to continue making transistors smaller, faster, and less power-hungry out as far as 2020.

Nanotubes and nanowires are materials that might come into use between 2013 and 2019, David said. After that, the company's plans are still very much up in the air.

Intel works very closely with leading colleges and universities around the world on research projects that will bear fruit in the 2020 time-frame, Gargini said. These relationships allow Intel to offload the vast amounts of early research to the universities and then select the most promising techniques, he said.

One of those techniques is called spintronics, said George Bourianoff, manager of emerging research technologies at Intel. Gates have historically been used to generate opposite transistor states, but the company is looking into the feasibility of using other methods such as a magnetic field to accomplish the same thing, he said.

Spintronics is the study of spinning electrons. When electrical charges revolve, they produce a magnetic field that points in a certain direction depending on the direction of the spin. A field pointing in one direction could represent the "on" state of a transistor, while its opposite could represent the "off" position.

One of the benefits of this technique is that it requires a very small amount of power to change the spin of the electron and have that electron represent the opposite state, compared to the power needed to switch a conventional transistor gate on or off, Bourianoff said.

IBM Corp. is also looking into using spintronics as an advanced transistor manufacturing technique. It has already used a similar method to create a giant magneto-resistive head on a hard drive, dramatically expanding capacity.










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Tom Krazit Tom Krazit is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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