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ABSTRACT
NRAM, short for nano-RAM or nanotube-based/nonvolatile random access memory, is a new memory storage technology owned by the company Nantero. The technology blends together tiny carbon nanotubes with conventional semiconductors. Because the memory-containing elements, nanotubes, are so small, NRAM technology will achieve very high memory densities: at least 10-100 times our current best. NRAM will operate electromechanically rather than just electrically, setting it apart from other memory technologies as a nonvolatile form of memory, meaning data will be retained even when the power is turned off. The creators of the technology claim it has the advantages of all the best memory technologies with none of the disadvantages, setting it up to be the universal medium for memory in the future. Carbon nanotubes are small tubes of carbon atoms, only a few nanometers wide -1/100,000th the width of a human hair. The wall of a carbon nanotube is composed of a single carbon atom. Nanotubes are as rigid as diamond and conduct electricity as well as copper. In recent years, the cost of mass-producing nanotubes has plummeted. By creating a thin "fabric" of nanotubes and arranging them in junctions on a silicon wafer embedded with conventional circuitry, a hybrid electro-mechanical memory system can be created. A nanotube configured in one position would indicate a 1, and in another position could indicate a 0. Manufacturing begins when a thin layer of nanotubes are spread across the surface of the wafer, then functionally unnecessary nanotubes are removed using conventional lithography techniques. Currently the method of removing the unwanted nanotubes makes the system impractical. The accuracy and size of the epitaxial machinery is considerably "larger" that the cell size otherwise possible. Existing experimental cells have very low densities compared to existing systems; some new method of construction will have to be introduced in order to make the system practical.
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INDEX
1. Introduction ....3 2. Nanotechnology .....8 3. Carbon Nano Tube ...12 4. Nano-Ram.21 5. Advantages ...29 6. Disadvantages...27 7. Application...30 8. Comparison with other proposed systems ....31 9. Future Scope.32 10. Conclusion....33 11. References & Bibliography..34
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Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
Today the world is of digital. All the electronic devices are formalized to manipulate the digital data. The back-bone of todays research and development The Computer is also a digital device. Digital by name deals with digits and all the gadgets available today (like PDAs, laptops, etc) need to manipulate the digital data. To manipulate first we have to store it at a place. Thus MEMORY in todays world plays a key role and a constant research to improve the memory in todays electronic gadgets is ON. RAM (random access memory) is the main storage device in all digital systems. The speed of the system mainly depends on how speed and vast the RAM is. Today with increasing power need of man even the POWER consumed is also a major part to look at. By generations RAM also had under gone many changes. Some of the versions of RAMs which are in use are DRAM, SRAM and FLASH MEMORY. DRAM (dynamic RAM) although has a capability to hold large amounts of data it is slower and volatile.
SRAM (static RAM) even superior to DRAM in speed but less dense. Even this is volatile in nature. Overcoming the volatile nature of these two, FLASH MEMORY is the latest of today random access memories. Even this fails in power saving. Overcoming all these failures of above mentioned RAMs , researchers developed a new RAM which unlike the semiconductor technology alone used by the former, uses a combination of NANOTECHNOLOGY and contemporary SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGY and is
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Greek prefix which means dwarf. In science this prefix denotes a fraction of 10-9 a given unit. For instance 1nm = 10-9m
RAM (Random-Access Memory) is a form of computer data storage. It takes the form of integrated circuits that allow stored volatile data to be accessed in random order.
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1.2.1 DRAM:
Dynamic RAM is the most common type of memory in use today. Inside a dynamic RAM chip, each memory cell holds one bit of information and is made up of two parts: a transistor and a capacitor. These are, of course, extremely small transistors and capacitors so that millions of them can fit on a single memory chip. The capacitor holds the bit of information -- a 0 or a 1. The transistor acts as a switch that lets the control circuitry on the memory chip read the capacitor or change its state. A capacitor is like a small bucket that is able to store electrons. To store a 1 in the memory cell, the bucket is filled with electrons. To store a 0, it is emptied. The problem with the capacitor's bucket is that it has a leak. In a matter of a few milliseconds a full bucket becomes empty. Therefore, for dynamic memory to work, either the CPU or the memory controller has to come along and recharge all of the capacitors holding a 1 before they discharge. To do this, the memory controller reads the memory and then writes it right back. This refresh operation happens automatically thousands of times per second.
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This refresh operation is where dynamic RAM gets its name. Dynamic RAM has to be dynamically refreshed all of the time or it forgets what it is holding. The downside of all of this refreshing is that it takes time and slows down the memory.
1.2.2 SRAM:
Static RAM uses a completely different technology. In static RAM, a form of flip-flop holds each bit of memory. A flip-flop for a memory cell takes 4 or 6 transistors along with some wiring, but never has to be refreshed. This makes static RAM significantly faster than dynamic RAM. However, because it has more parts, a static memory cell takes a lot more space on a chip than a dynamic memory cell. Therefore you get less memory per chip, and that makes static RAM a lot more expensive. So static RAM is fast and expensive, and dynamic RAM is less expensive and slower. Therefore static RAM is used to create the CPU's speed-sensitive cache, while dynamic RAM forms the larger system RAM space.
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1.3.2 EDORAM
EDO RAM, which stands for Extended Data Out RAM came out in 1995 as a new type of memory available for Pentium based systems. EDO is a modified form of FPM RAM which is commonly referred to as Hyper Page Mode. Extended Data Out refers to fact that the data output drivers on the memory module are not switched off when the memory controller removes the column address to begin the next cycle, unlike FPM RAM. Most early Penitum based systems use EDO.
1.3.3 SDRAM
SDRAM, which is short for Synchronous DRAM is a type of DRAM that runs in synchronization with the memory bus. Beginning in 1996 most Intel based chipsets began to support SDRAM which made it a popular choice for new systems in 2001. SDRAM is capable of running at 133MHz which is about three times faster than FPM RAM and twice as fast as EDO RAM. Most Pentium or Celeron systems purchased in 1999 have SDRAM.
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1.3.4 DDRRAM
DDR RAM, which stands for Double Data Rate which is a type of SDRAM and appeared first on the market around 2001 but didnt catch on until about 2001 when the mainstream motherboards started supporting it. The difference between SDRAM and DDR RAM is that instead of doubling the clock rate it transfers data twice per clock cycle which effectively doubles the data rate. DDRRAM has become mainstream in the graphics card market and has become the memory standard.
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Chapter 2
NANOTECHNOLOGY
Nanotechnology, shortened to "nanotech", is the study of the controlling of matter on an atomic and molecular scale. Generally nanotechnology deals with structures of the size 100 nanometers or smaller in at least one dimension, and involves developing materials or devices within that size. Nanotechnology is very diverse, ranging from extensions of conventional device physics to completely new approaches based upon molecular selfassembly, from developing new materials with dimensions on the nanoscale to investigating whether we can directly control matter on the atomic scale. There has been much debate on the future implications of nanotechnology. Nanotechnology has the potential to create many new materials and devices with a vast range of applications, such as in medicine, electronics and energy production. On the other hand, nanotechnology raises many of the same issues as with any introduction of new technology, including concerns about the toxicity and environmental impact of nonmaterial, and their potential effects on global economics, as well as speculation about various doomsday scenarios. These concerns have led to a debate among advocacy groups and governments on whether special regulation of nanotechnology is warranted.
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plausible, and exponential assembly enhances it with parallelism to produce a useful quantity of end products. The term "nanotechnology" was defined by Tokyo Science University Professor Norio Taniguchi in a 1974 paper as follows: "'Nano-technology' mainly consists of the processing of, separation, consolidation, and deformation of materials by one atom or by one molecule." In the 1980s the basic idea of this definition was explored in much more depth by Dr. K. Eric Drexler, who promoted the technological significance of nano-scale phenomena and devices through speeches and the books Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology (1986) and Nanosystems: Molecular Machinery, Manufacturing, and Computation, and so the term acquired its current sense. Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology is considered the first book on the topic of nanotechnology. Nanotechnology and nanoscience got started in the early 1980s with two major developments; the birth of cluster science and the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope (STM). This development led to the discovery of fullerenes in 1985 and carbon nanotubes a few years later. In another development, the synthesis and properties of semiconductor nanocrystals was studied; this led to a fast increasing number of metal and metal oxide nanoparticles and quantum dots. The atomic force microscope (AFM or SFM) was invented six years after the STM was invented. In 2000, the United States National Nanotechnology Initiative was founded to coordinate Federal nanotechnology research and development and is evaluated by the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. Electronics is fuelled by miniaturization. According to Drexler product can be made by combining atom by atom or molecule by molecule with the help of programmed microscopic robotic arms. It is possible because each atom is identical to any other atom of its flavor and has a remarkable attribute of sticking to each other. Nanotechnologys goal is a device called Universal Assembler that takes raw atoms in one side and delivers consumer goods out the other. It should have following properties: 1. Fractional atomic diameter accuracy. 2. Capability to execute finely controlled motions to transfer one or a few atom guided chemical reaction.
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By building objects on such a fine scale, we could make extraordinary things from ordinary matter
2.3 Theory
At the simplest level, nanotechnology is the manipulation single atoms and molecules to create objects that can be smaller than 100 nanometers. A nanometer is a billionth of a meter, which is about a hundred-thousandth of the diameter of a human hair, or 10 times the diameter of a hydrogen atom.
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Manufactured products are made from atoms. The properties of those products depend on how those atoms are arranged. If we rearrange the atoms in coal we can make diamond. If we rearrange the atoms in sand (and add a few other trace elements) we can make computer chips. If we rearrange the atoms in dirt, water and air, we can make potatoes. There are two more concepts commonly associated with Nanotechnology: 1. 2. Positional assembly Self replication Positional assembly refers to the arrangement of molecules so as to get the right molecular parts in the right places. The need for positional assembly implies an interest in molecular robotics e.g., robotic devices that are molecular both in their size and precision. These molecular scale positional devices are likely to resemble very small versions of their everyday macroscopic counterparts. The self replicating systems are able both to make copies of themselves and to manufacture useful products. If we can design and build one such system the manufacturing costs for more such systems and the products they make (assuming they can make copies of themselves in some reasonably inexpensive environment) will be very low. You wont think about installing Microsoft Office anymore. Youll think about growing software. The line is blurring in several ways. Scientists are learning to imitate biological patterns; biological entities are being used in technology products; and in the distant future, nanomachines may be circulating through our bloodstreams, attacking tumours and dispersing medicine.
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Chapter 3
CARBON NANOTUBES
The term nanotubes is normally used to refer to the carbon nanotubes, which has received enormous attention from researchers over the last few years and promises, along with close relatives such as the nanohorn, a host of interesting applications. There are many others types of nanotubes, from various inorganic kinds such as, those made from boron nitride, to organic ones, such as those made from self-assembling cyclic peptides (proteins components) or from naturally occurring heat shock proteins(extracted from bacteria that thrive in extreme environments). However, carbon nanotubes excites the most interest, promise the greatest variety of application and currently appear to have by far the highest commercial potential. Carbon nanotubes were discovered in 1991 by Sumio Iijima of NEC and are effectively long, thin cylinders of graphite, which you will be familiar with as the material in a pencil or as the basis of some lubricants. Graphite is made up of layers of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal lattice, like chicken wire. Though the chicken wire structure itself is very strong, the layers themselves sure not chemically bonded to each other but held together by weak forces called Vander Waals. It is the sliding across each other of these layers that gives graphite its lubricating qualities and makes the mark on a piece of paper as you draw your pencil over it. Now imagine taking one of these sheets of chicken wire and rolling it up into a cylinder and joining the loose wore ends. The result is a tube that was once described by Richard Smalley (who shared the Nobel Prize for the discovery of a related form of carbon called buckminsterfullerene) as nanotube. In one direction.the strongest damn thing youll ever make in this universe. In addition to their remarkable strength, this is usually quoted, that nanotube is 100 times stronger than steel & one-sixth of its weight, if steel is drawn with same size as that of nanotube (this is tensile strength-the ability to withstand a stretching force without breaking), carbon nanotubes have shown a surprising array of other properties. They can conduct heat as efficiently as diamond, conduct electricity as efficiently as copper, yet also be semiconducting (like the
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materials that make up the chips in our computers). They can produce streams of electrons very efficiently (field emission), which can be used to create light in displays for televisions or computers, or even in domestic lighting, and they can enhance the fluorescence of materials they are close to. Their electrical properties can be made to change in the presence can act like miniature springs and they can even be stuffed with other material. Nanotubes and their variants hold promise for storing fuels such as hydrogen or methanol for use in fuel cells and they make good support for catalysts.
cylindrical carbon molecules have novel properties that make them potentially useful in many applications in nanotechnology, electronics, optics and other fields of materials science, as well as potential uses in architectural fields. They exhibit extraordinary strength and
unique electrical properties, and are efficient thermal conductors. The nature of the bonding of a nanotube is described by applied quantum chemistry, specifically, orbital hybridization. The chemical bonding of nanotubes is composed entirely of sp2 bonds, similar to those of graphite. This bonding structure, which is stronger than the sp3 bonds found in diamonds, provides the molecules with their unique strength. Nanotubes naturally align themselves into "ropes" held together by Van der Waals forces. Since carbon nanotubes were discovered on accident by Sumio Iijima in 1991 during another experiment, hundreds of studies have been started and dedicated to achieving a better understanding of the structure of carbon nanotubes. Although the structure of carbon nanotubes has been extensively studied by researchers and scientists in a wide variety of fields including materials science, architecture, agriculture and engineering, the full implications of this tiny microscopic wonder are still locked away in its unique natural creation, varied structural components and its ability to be both immensely flexible as well as incredibly strong.
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Carbon comes in many forms. Two well-known forms of carbon are graphite and diamond. Graphite and diamond have drastically different mechanical properties such as hardness. Diamond is one of the hardest materials known to man. It can cut through glass.
Fig.3.1 structure of CNT Graphite, on the other hand, is a very soft material, used in pencil lead. The difference in properties is due to the structure of the atoms and their bonds in the material, also known as the materials crystal structure. Graphite is made up of stacked sheets of hexagons with a carbon atom at each corner of the hexagon, and looks much like chicken wire. These sheets are stacked one on top of the other, but easily slip and slide. Diamond has a tetragonal crystal structure with very few slip planes.
Carbon nanotubes are a fairly new form of carbon. A carbon nanotube structure looks like sheets of graphite that have been rolled up to form small tubes. This small difference in structure leads to a much stronger, stiffer material. Carbon nanotubes have a diameter of 1 to 10 nanometers, yet they are 50 times stronger than steel. The special nature of carbon combines with the molecular perfection of buckytubes (singlewall carbon nanotubes) to endow them with exceptionally high material properties such as electrical and thermal conductivity, strength, stiffness, and toughness. No other element in the
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periodic table bonds to itself in an extended network with the strength of the carbon-carbon bond. The delocalised pi-electron donated by each atom is free to move about the entire structure, rather than stay home with its donor atom, giving rise to the first molecule with metallic-type electrical conductivity. The high-frequency carbon-carbon bond vibrations provide an intrinsic thermal conductivity higher than even diamond.
In most materials, however, the actual observed material properties - strength, electrical conductivity, etc. - are degraded very substantially by the occurrence of defects in their structure. For example, high strength steel typically fails at about 1% of its theoretical breaking strength. Buckytubes, however, achieve values very close to their theoretical limits because of their perfection of structure - their molecular perfection. This aspect is part of the unique story of buckytubes. Buckytubes are an example of true nanotechnology: only a nanometre in diameter, but molecules that can be manipulated chemically and physically. They open incredible applications in materials, electronics, chemical processing and energy management.
bonds need not be either parallel or perpendicular, in which case the hexagons will spiral around the tube with a pitch depending on how the tube is wrapped. Fig 7 illustrates these point.
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Carbon nanotubes appear to be sheets of graphite cells that have been mended together to look almost like a latticework fence and then rolled up in a tube shape. Although this is a simple explanation for the look of the structure of carbon nanotubes, this is not how carbon nanotubes are created, nor does it explain their immense strength or other incredible structural abilities.
fig 3.3 classification of CNT One of the major classifications of carbon nanotubes is into singled-walled varieties (SWNTs) which have a single cylinder wall and multi-walled varieties (MWNTs) which have cylinders within cylinders. The length of both type vary greatly, depending upon on the way they are made and are generally nanoscopic rather than microscopic i.e. greater than 100 micrometers. The aspect ratio (length divided by diameter) is typically greater than100 and can be up to 10,000, but recently even this was made to look small. IN May 2002, SWNT strand were made in which the SWNTs were claimed to be as long as 20 cm. Even more recently, the same group has made strand of SWNTs 160cm long, but the precise make up of these strand has not yet been made clear. A group in china has found, purely by accident that packs of relatively short carbon nanotubes can be drawn out into a bundle of fibers, making a thread only 0.2 mm in diameter but
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up to 30 cm long. The joins between the nanotubes in this thread represent a weakness but heating the thread has been found to increase the strength significantly, presumably through some sort of fusing of the individual tubes.
3.4 Two major problems have so far thwarted attempts to shrink metal wires further:
1. There is as yet no good way to remove the heat produced by the devices, so packing them in more tightly will only lead to rapid overheating. 2. As metal wires get smaller, the gust of electrons moving through them becomes strong enough to bump the metal atoms around and before long, the wires fail like blown fuses.
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7. In defect-free nanotubes, electrons travel ballistically-that is, without any of the scattering that gives metal wires their resistance. 8. At the small size of a nanotube, the flow of electrons can be controlled with almost perfect precision. Scientists have recently demonstrated in nanotubes a phenomenon called Coulomb blockade, in which more than one electron at a time on to a nanotube. This phenomenon may make it easier to build single-electron transistors, the ultimate in sensitive electronics.
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in their subset of allowed states. These nanotubes are truly metallic nano wires. The remaining two third of the nanotubes are semiconductors. This means that, like silicon, they do not pass current easily without an additional boost of energy. The burst of light or a voltage can knock electrons from valence states into conducting states where they can move about freely. The amount of energy needed depends on the separation between the two levels and is the so called band gap of a semiconductor. Carbon nanotubes dont all have the same band gap, because for every circumference there is a unique set of allowed valences and the conduction states. The smallest diameter nanotubes have very few states that are spaced far apart in energy. As nanotube diameter increase, more and more states are allowed and the spacing between them shrinks. No other known material can be so easily tuned. A single walled nanotube is only one carbon atom thick. It can be considered as a sheet of graphite curled into the form of tube. Its properties can be changed by changing the direction of the curl. It can be made highly conducting or semi-conducting based on the direction of the curl. A carbon nanotube is highly elastic. It can be made in the shape of a spring, brush or spiral. They have very low specific weight. Another very useful property of the nanotubes is that their high mechanical and tensile strength. A carbon nanotube can be made into a length of up to 100 microns. They are chemically inert. In near future it is possible that microprocessors may be converted into nanoprocessors.
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Chapter 4
NANO RAM
The proprietary NRAM design, invented by Dr.Thomas Rueckes, Nanteros Chief Technology Officer, Uses carbon nanotubes as active memory element. Nano-RAM is a proprietary computer memory technology from the company Nantero. It is a type of nonvolatile random access memory based on the mechanical position of carbon nanotubes deposited on a chip-like substrate. It can replace DRAM, SRAM, flash and ultimately hard disk storage. In other word a universal memory chip suitable for countless existing and new applications in the field of electronics.
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What causes this to act as a memory is that the two positions of the nanotubes are both stable. In the off position the mechanical strain on the tubes is low, so they will naturally remain in this position and continue to read "0". When the tubes are pulled into contact with the upper electrode a new force, the tiny Vander Waals force, comes into play and attracts the tubes enough to overcome the mechanical strain. Once in this position the tubes will again happily remain there and continue to read "1". These positions are fairly resistant to outside interference like radiation that can erase or flip memory in a conventional DRAM. NRAMs are built by depositing masses of nanotubes on a pre-fabricated chip containing rows of bar-shaped electrodes with the slightly taller insulating layers between them. Tubes in the "wrong" location are then removed, and the gold terminals deposited on top. Any number of methods can be used to select a single cell for writing, for instance the second set of electrodes can be run in the opposite direction, forming a grid, or they can be selected by adding voltage to the terminals as well, meaning that only those selected cells have a total voltage high enough to cause the flip. Currently the method of removing the unwanted nanotubes makes the system impractical. The accuracy and size of the epitaxy machinery (Epitaxy refers to the method of depositing a monocrystalline film on a monocrystalline substrate. The deposited film is denoted as epitaxial film or epitaxial layer. The term epitaxy comes from the Greek roots epi, meaning "above", and taxis, meaning "in ordered manner". Existing experimental cells have very low densities compared to existing systems; some new method of construction will have to be introduced in order to make the system practical.
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molecular forces of attractions, would hold the switch in place until application of fields of different polarity causes the nanotube to return to its straightened position.
fig. 4.1 simple construction of NRAM showing its various components. As shown in figure sagging and straightening represent 1 and 0 states, respectively, for a random access memory. In its 0state, the nanotube fabric remains suspended above the electrode. When the transistor below the electrode is turned on, the electrode is turned on, the electrode produces an electric field that causes the nanotubes fabric to bend and touch the electrode - a configuration that denotes 1 state. This is the principle of a switching device. A nanotube memory is faster much smaller while consuming little power. Due to their extraordinary tensile strength, resilience and very high conductivity, nanotubes can be flexed up and down million times without any damage and can make a very good switching contact.
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fig. 4.3 When reading an OFF state no current flows from the carbon nanotube ribbon to the electrode
fig. 4.4 When reading an ON state a current passes from the carbon nanotube to the electrode
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fig. 4.5 Array of nanotubes Nanotubes purchased from bulk suppliers are a form of high -tech carbon soot that contains a residue of about 5 percent iron a containment that must be removed before further processing. It requires a complex filtration process to reduce the amount of iron to the parts per billion levels. The purified carbon nanotubes are deposited as a film on the surface of a silicon wafer without interfering with adjoining electrical circuitry from which chips are carved. Deposition of nanotubes onto the wafer using a gas vapour requires temperatures so high that the circuitry already in place would be ruined. It is therefore done by spraying a special solvent containing nanotube on the top of the silicon disk spinning like a phonograph record. The thin film of nanotubes left after the solvent is evaporated, is subjected to standard semiconductor lithography and etching, which leave the surface groupings of nanotubes with interconnecting wires. Thereafter, chips are cut from the wafer and encapsulated by the standard IC technology A nanotube is a form of fullerene carbon in which the hexagonally connected graphite sheet is curled up to form a tube of nanometer-scale diameters they grow, the tubes align perpendicular to each other with a slight gap between each pair.
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Nantero has said that each junction contains multiple nanotubes, providing redundancy and protection against catastrophic bit-failure. Nantero also said the array was produced using only standard semiconductor processes, thereby making manufacture of the NRAM in existing wafer fabs more likely. It also results in substantial redundancy for the memory, because each memory bit depends not on one single nanotube, but upon a large number of nanotubes that resemble a fabric. The biggest challenge was figuring out how to place the nanotubes in the correct positions. Each nanotube is approximately 50-to-100,000 times smaller than a piece of your hair. This means theyre about 1-to-2 nanometers in diameter, and a nanometer is a billionth of a meter. To build the array of nanotubes, Nantero used a manufacturing method that involved depositing a very thin layer of carbon nanotubes over the entire surface of a wafer, and then using lithography and etching to remove the nanotubes that are not in the correct position to serve as elements in the array. This manufacturing method solved the problem of growing nanotubes reliably in large arrays. At the end of our process only the nanotubes in the correct positions are remaining. The present size of the array is 10GBit, but the process could be used to make even larger arrays. Nantero claims to have developed an array of ten billion suspended nanotube junctions on single silicon. The main variable now controlling the size is the resolution of the lithography equipment.
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Chapter 5
ADVANTAGES OF NANO-RAM
Permanently nonvolatile High speed similar to DRAM/SRAM High density similar to DRAM Unlimited lifetime Low power consumption Data storage CMOS-compatible manufacturing process & compatible with all existing hardware devices such as the PC, digital camera, mp3 players etc Very small in size.
Highly resistant to environmental forces (heat, cold and magnetism). NRAM has a density, at least in theory, similar to that of DRAM. DRAM consists of a number of capacitors, which are essentially two small metal plates with a thin insulator between them. NRAM is similar, with the terminals and electrodes being roughly the same size as the plates in a DRAM, the nanotubes between them being so much smaller they add nothing to the overall size. However it seems there is a minimum size at which a DRAM can be built, below which there simply not enough charge is being stored to be able to effectively read it. NRAM appears to be limited only by the current state of art in lithography. This means that NRAM may be able to become much denser than DRAM, meaning that it will also be less expensive; if it becomes possible to control the locations of carbon nanotubes at the scale the Semiconductor Industry can control the placement of devices on SILICON.
Additionally, unlike DRAM, NRAM does not require power to "refresh" it, and will retain its memory even after the power is removed. Additionally the power needed to write to the device is much lower than a DRAM, which has to build up charge on the plates. This means that NRAM will not only compete with DRAM in terms of cost, but will require much less power to run, and as a result also be much faster (write speed is largely determined by the total charge
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needed). NRAM can theoretically reach speeds similar to SRAM, which is faster than DRAM but much less dense, and thus much more expensive. In comparison with other NVRAM technologies, NRAM has the potential to be even more advantageous. The most common form of NVRAM today is Flash RAM, which combines a bistable transistor circuit known as a flip flop (also the basis of SRAM) with a highperformance insulator wrapped around one of the transistor's bases. After being written to, the insulator traps electrons in the base electrode, locking it into the "1" state. However, in order to change that bit the insulator has to be "overcharged" to erase any charge already stored in it. This requires high voltage, about 10 volts, much more than a battery can provide. Flash systems thus have to include a "charge pump" that slowly builds up power and then releases it at higher voltage. This process is not only very slow, but degrades the insulators as well. For this reason Flash has a limited lifetime, between 10,000 and 1,000,000 "writes" before the device will no longer operate effectively. NRAM potentially avoids all of these issues. The read and write process are both "low energy" in comparison to Flash (or DRAM for that matter), meaning that NRAM can result in longer battery life in conventional devices. It may also be much faster to write than either, meaning it may be used to replace both. A modern cell phone will often include Flash memory for storing phone numbers and such, DRAM for higher speed working memory because flash is too slow, and additionally some SRAM in the CPU because DRAM is too slow for its own use. With NRAM all of these may be replaced, with some NRAM placed on the CPU to act as the CPU cache, and more in other chips replacing both the DRAM and Flash. NRAM is faster and denser than all existing memory technologies. It uses only one tenth of the power used by existing RAM or flash memory to store information. NRAM is a non volatile memory. That means that when you turn the power off, you don't lose the data. And that means that you never have to wait for your computer to boot up again; it turns on instantly. Each memory bit in an NRAM depends not on a single nanotube but on a large number of nanotubes woven together. Thus the NRAM offers substantial redundancy of memory. NRAM is highly resistant to environmental forces (heat, cold and magnetism). NRAM can be manufactured using the existing machineries in semiconductor factories. So no high capital is needed for its production. NRAM is compatible with all existing hardware devices such as the PC, digital camera, mp3 players etc.
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Chapter 6
DISADVANTAGES OF NANO-RAM
Relatively high cost. Requirement of high precision.
Challenges faced:
1. Barriers to market: Nantero is developing an alternate technology in a field that already offers multiple memory options. The company will need to convince potential users of the benefits of NRAM over existing methods. 2. Nantero seems to lag behind MRAM developers -- Motorola and IBM, to name two -in bringing its technology out of the research phase and into actual product development. 3. The downside is the fact that the DRAM market is oversupplied and those chipmakers frequently have to sell at a loss, making it difficult for any new technology to break in.
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Chapter 7
APPLICATIONS
Non-volatile highly scalable fast memories are used for stand-alone, embedded, or application specific designs like, Computer and Laptops. (Enabling instant on performance, with instant boot up) Mobile devices. (Faster storage of more data for PDAs and handhelds) Embedded memory. (More powerful & faster microprocessor, microcontroller, other logic device can be built) High speed network server. Faster and denser memory storages.(eg. hard disk).
NRAM could enable instant-on computers which boot and reboot instantly, PDAs with 10 gigabytes of memory, MP3 players with thousands of songs and replace flash memories in digital cameras and cell phones. Other possible uses include high speed network servers. And because the technology is considerable faster and denser than DRAM, Nantero believes NRAM could eventually replace hard disk storage.
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
FUTURE SCOPE
Nanotubes, atomic-scale carbon based structures, are set to begin the migration from the lab into the wafer fab. In the first effort of its kind, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has begun to develop a standard that will define electrical test methods for individual nanotubes. The standard will seek to establish a common metrics foundation for the many research programs underway on the use of nanotubes in electronics. The standard, IEEE P1650 (TM), Standard Test Methods for Measurement of Electrical Proper ties of Carbon Nanotubes, will recommend the tools and procedures needed to generate reproducible electrical data on the structures. The efforts applied in nanotechnology have surfaced a strong need for common ways to evaluate the electrical characteristics of nanotubes, so what is done by one group can be confirmed by others. The standard will seek to meet this need. The tests defined in the standard will help form a bridge between the lab and the production. In May 2003, Nantero announced it had created an array of billion suspended nanotube junctions on a single wafer. The process involves depositing a very thin layer of carbon nanotubes over the entire surface of the wafer, then using lithography and etching to remove the nanotubes that are not in the right position to serve as elements in the array. The announcement was significant because it demonstrates we can create NRAM using standard equipment, which means NRAM can be made in any existing factory. At present, Nantero is trying to make Nano-RAM a commercial product. In future, these carbon nanotube technology memory devices can replace all memory storage devices which are currently booming in market today.
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Chapter 10
CONCLUSION
It's hard to imagine a more exciting area than nanoelectronics .This paper gives an over-view of application of nanotechnology in field of electronics. Moores law has held true for almost 40 years now, but the current lithographic technology has physical limits when it comes to making things smaller and the semiconductor industry which often refers to the collection of these as the red brick wall thinks that the wall will be hit in around fifteen years. At the point a new technology will have to take over and nanotechnology offers a variety of potentially viable options and carbon nanotube are one of the most commonly mentioned building blocks of nanotechnology. Every day at our lab our engineers are coming up with new ideas and new ways to build products on a molecular level that have never been done before. And the whole field of nanotechnology is one that will, over the next few decades, affect just about every area of human life, from electronics to medical care and beyond, so it's great to be right there on the leading edge. We could say that the prospects of nanotechnology are very bright. It will take sometime to really make an impact on human race. But when it finally comes, nanotechnology will be an undeniable force which will change very course of life. Thus, with the beginning of the usage of NRAM which gives instant-on computers, we can obtain a very fast and ever existing Random Access Memory for very vast applications & large memories can be built with nanotube technology. Though this technology today is limited to laboratories and not economically viable, some new method of construction will have to be introduced in order to make the system practical.
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NANO-RAM
Chapter 11
REFERENCES/BIBLIOGRAPHY
[1]. www.nanterno.com [2]. "EcoRAM held up as less power-hungry option than DRAM for server farms" by Heather Clancy 2008 [3]. www.nano-tek.org [4]. "Basic Concepts of Nanotechnology" History of Nano-Technology, News, Materials, Potential Risks and Important People. [5]. "Nanomaterials and Nanoparticles: Sources and Toxicity" by Cristina Buzea, Ivan Pacheco, and Kevin Robbie (2007). [6]. www.tech-report.com [7]. www.siliconstrategies.com [8]. 10 Emerging technologies MIT technology review [9]. Nano Engineered Memory solutions-IEEE journal
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