Basic transistor flaw could hobble chip design

By Tom Espiner, ZDNet UK
Friday, May 29, 2009 01:22 PM

The basic rules by which chips are being designed could be wrong, physicists have warned.

Researchers at the US National Institute of Science and Technology have warned that a flaw exists in transistor noise models which could fundamentally affect the efficiency of future chips.

The elastic tunneling model predicts that as transistors get smaller, electronic noise within the transistors, which can cause erratic on-off states, should increase. However, a team of Nist scientists, who have been exploring nanoscale transistor behavior, have found that transistor noise does not increase as transistors are scaled down.

"This implies that the theory explaining the effect must be wrong," said Jason Campbell, who lead the research, in a statement. "The model was a good working theory when transistors were large, but our observations clearly indicate that it's incorrect at the smaller nanoscale regimes where industry is headed."

The team also discovered that as less energy is pushed through nano-transistors, transistor noise increases. This could spell trouble for low-energy chips, which are being explored for use in devices including laptops and phones.

"This is a real bottleneck in our development of transistors for low-power applications," said Campbell. "We have to understand the problem before we can fix it--and troublingly, we don't know what's actually happening."

Campbell credits fellow Nist researcher K.P. Cheung with first identifying a possible problem with the elastic tunneling model. Researchers from the University of Maryland College Park, and Rutgers University, also contributed to the team's work.

The researchers gave a presentation of some of their findings at an IEEE event last week. The team's initial results were published in a paper entitled The Origin of Random Telegraph Noise in Highly Scaled nMOSFETs in February.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Use SCP for quick, secure file transfers

Internet Security

When you need to securely transfer a single file, SCP may be the ideal tool.


Read more »



Amendments to empower Copyright Tribunal

Blog thumbnail

As a lawyer, I often inform my clients about the need to clear licenses with the various licensing societies whenever they use works belonging to other parties. This is especially..... by Bryan Tan

Read more »

Tags

  1. battery
  2. camera
  3. graphics
  4. hard drive
  5. hewlett - packard co.
  6. high tech computer corp.
  7. intel corp.
  8. keyboard
  9. microsoft windows
  10. microsoft windows mobile
  11. mobile
  12. network
  13. notebook
  14. performance
  15. screen
  16. server
  17. storage
  18. touchpad
  19. usb
  20. vat