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New Chip Technology Could Help Computers Think on Their Own

BY Kit EatonFri Feb 27, 2009 at 5:54 AM

While there's a lot of work to push nanotechnology as the future of computer chips, good old-fashioned semiconductors still have a lot of life in them yet: and they've recently been given a boost with a radical new type of circuit element that incorporates both semiconductor and nanotechnology.

Its called the memristor, and if you haven't heard of it that's not much of surprise--they were only manufactured for the first time last year. Memristors are tiny electronic devices that change their electrical resistance proportionally to the current running through them--in contrast transistors "turn on" current when a small input voltage is applied. Unlike transistors, memristors don't forget their state when they're turned off, making them useful as non-volatile memory for example.

Now a team from Hewlett-Packard labs in Palo-Alto has demonstrated a hybrid transistor-memristor circuit for the first time, using a nanowire grid and titanium dioxide as a semiconductor. The resulting device had memristors at the nanowire junctions and was surrounded by transistors.

Why should you get excited about this? For one reason--a transistor/memristor paired assembly can be programmed to either behave like a traditional logic circuit, route signals across it or behave as a memory storage unit. And these are all tasks that require specially-engineered circuitry in existing chips. In other words, a memristor-chip could pack in much more processing power in the same area--and that's the trend that our increasingly-powerful chips have been following for decades.

Yet more interestingly, since the memristor "remembers" what state its in, by doing a calculation with a group of the circuits and feeding back the output of a calculation to the same memristors, the device could effectively "self-program." As HP spokesman Tim Williams puts it: "self-programming is a form of learning. Thus, circuits with memristors may have the capacity to learn how to perform a task, rather than have to be programmed to do it."

And that's one long-predicted goal of computing technology that may even enable synaptic-like responses. Your computer in ten years time may do some of your thinking for you.

[via Physorg]

Topics:

Innovation, Technology, self-programming, Clever chips, Moore's Law, computing, semiconductors, memristors, circuitry, computer processors, Hewlett-Packard Company, Computer and Peripheral Equipment Manufacturing, Information Technology Sector, Manufacturing Sector, Technology Sector


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