Original URL: http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2007/12/08/unisantis_and_ime_3d_transistor/
Japanese R&D firm Unisantis says (http://www.ime.a-star.edu.sg/html/highlights_200712_02.html) it will create and sell a new kind of "3-D" transistor that provides 10 times the computing speed of current chips.
It is entering a 24-month collaborative agreement with Singapore's Institute of Microelectronics for simultaneous design work.
The companies claim processor clockspeeds could reach between 20GHz and 50GHz by using a 3-D structure that arranges components vertically, as opposed to the horizontal design of our forefathers. The device is dubbed the Surrounding Gate Transistor.
And just as the alarming appearance of a sphere confounds — and yes — frightens a resident of Flatland, so shall the eldrich machinations of this 3-D transistor do unto this Register hack.
But rest assured brighter minds (http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071207-new-transistor-design-may-kick-off-race-to-10ghz.html) are on the case.
The design work is headed by CTO of Unisantis Fujio Masuoka - a man credited with the invention of flash memory. He'll be joined by some 30 academics, engineers and scientists on the project.
According to Masuoko, SGT is a vertical silicon pillar surrounded by memory cells, electrical contacts and various other unnamed components (our guess: the screeching souls of the damned).
The 3-D structure apparently reduces the distance that electrons travel, generates less heat and costs less to produce than existing chips.
"The SGT also allows further improvements in silicon-based semiconductors, in terms of transistor size and processing speed, for at least 30 more years before the theoretical limits are reached. Such improvements are necessary for new-generation IC chips to meet the computing power demanded by IT products and computing networks of ever-increasing functionality and complexity," said Masuoka. ®
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