Can Graphene Make Computers 1000 Times Faster?

in #technology7 years ago

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Computers have really come a long way in the last two decades. I was just a child when PCs had started going mainstream and I still remember how bulky they used to be once.

I still remember the feeling of being amazed when I finally got my hands on one as a teenager and could do stuff that I had never even imagined before. Playing games, being able to paint, printing stuff, browsing the internet, were all, out of the world experiences at the time.

Today, we are able to do a lot more and a lot faster. The pace of technological development in this area has been nothing less than outstanding and almost sci-fi like, if you ask me.

It is only now in the later part of 2010s, that we have begun to feel that speed slow down. The amazingly monstrous growth in computing speed which we were all used to, year after year, has now halted in a way and it’s nobody’s fault. It’s just physics.

Why It Is Slowing Down

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In 1965, Gordon Moore, the co-founder of Intel made an observation about transistors in an integrated circuit. He observed that the number of transistors in a chip doubles roughly every two years while the costs get halved.

The more the number of transistors per square inch on a chip, the faster it is. This exponential growth every two years has brought massive increase in computing power in the last few decades.

Modern smartphones, tablets, laptops, computers and the performance they offer have been possible due to the presence of billions of transistors in their microprocessors.

Now however, transistors have become so small (just 14 nanometers across), that to make them even smaller in just two years, is proving to be quite difficult and costly. That is why most processors have been stuck at speeds of 3-4 GHz for quite some time now.

Enter Graphene

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Ever since its discovery in 2004, Graphene has been hailed as THE wonder material we had been looking for. A one stop solution for many, many of our problems. Graphene is a 2D sheet of carbon atoms which is 200 times stronger than steel and a much better conductor of electricity than copper.

Its properties allow it to be used virtually anywhere and thus it is poised to revolutionise many industries. Some examples where it can be used are: batteries, spacecrafts, planes, transistors, bullet proof vests, DNA sequencers and so much more.

While all these applications sound really interesting, graphene’s use in computer chips is perhaps one of the most exciting and important one. Soon, we will need a new material to sustain the growth in computing power and graphene just might be it.

In fact, researchers from many different universities have teamed up to see to that goal. They are trying to develop a graphene-based transistor that is much faster than the silicon ones and use far less power.

A 1000 Times Faster Computer?

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The team working on this were able to control the resistance of the flowing current in a graphene ribbon with the help of graphene nanotubes. They then tested the increase in clock speed of a graphene transistor based logic circuit.

Their initial findings suggest that the clock speed increased by a thousand times and more importantly, the power consumed was far less, at only a hundredth of the power required by silicon based chips.

Another advantage of using graphene as transistors is that they are much, much smaller than the silicon ones and therefore we could one day make electronics orders of magnitude smaller.

Right now one of the biggest hurdles of achieving this graphene based computer goal is that graphene is extremely difficult to manufacture but with all things technology, it too will get solved with more time and research.

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This has me wondering, what stock(s) or etf(s) offer the highest exposure to graphene tech?

Some quick research brings up China owning nearly 75% of all current (above ground?) graphene. It seems a real race between Samsung and Nokia and other phone/ television making companies, to get the first graphene improved tech to the market, is in the process.

I tried to find a graphene based ETF and couldn't find any, with perhaps the exception of this "motif" (click to bring to the link) -- the "Graphene Dream".

From http://www.mining.com/us-researchers-grow-graphene-on-silver/ (by Cecilia Jamasmie, dated Jan. 15, 2014):

Researchers from the US Northwestern University and Argonne National Laboratory have recently proved that graphene — the one-atom-thick carbon layer with extraordinary conductivity and strength— can be grown on a single-crystal silver substrate.

The finding, say the experts, could result in exceptionally pristine samples, which are ideal to produce ultrafast electronics and advanced optics. Last year, for instance, researchers from the Centre for Graphene Science added a one-atom thick layer of graphene to internet switches, noticing they became 100-times faster. But until now, the known methods for growing graphene on metals turned out to be unsuccessful, particularly with silver.

Graphene has been described as one of the newest wonder materials, showing promise in a number of fields due to its remarkable properties due to its strength, lightness, flexibility, conductivity and low cost. It has even proved successful for nuclear waste removal and to treat Alzheimers. However, experts say these innovations won't be making their way out of the lab anytime soon.

It is good news that tech companies are in race because no matter who gets their first, it will be beneficial for everyone.

Or they use it to develop hyper-intelligent AI that explodes in intelligence and destroys humanity... Beneficial for everyone?

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@sauravrugta - A 1000 times faster computer sounds fantastic. I remember those days (like you mentioned) when we used to have those PCs (XT and ATs) that used to have a whopping big ram of 128 MB and used to run at clock speeds (?) of 133 KHzs or something like that. And now, in spite of the Moore's law, we are talking about a 1000 times fast computer thanks to graphene. It does take disruptive technologies or radical out of the box thinking for such technological leaps. I am excited to read about this development. Thanks for the heads up. Cheers. Upvoted.
Regards,
vm2904

Yes, I am absolutely excited to see where this thing goes :D

Although there are surely a lot of riddles that need to be solved in order to be able to manufacture a computer based on graphene as you told us, I believe that even we manage to achieve that, such a revolutionary technology concerning processing power will not be allowed to be accessed by us mere 'mortals'. A machine that will have a thousand times better results will simply cause panic in an industry that permeates most, if not all, aspects of our lives and bring such enormous losses of funds worldwide that it will not be permitted to be released. In order to gain, they must produce hi tech devices that each time are a little bit better than their predecessors, even if the mega corporations already know the avenue to make them significantly better. Let's all hope that I am somehow mistaken and such amazing discoveries find a way to drastically improve the quality of our lives.

Yes, I am aware of what you are saying and therefore believe that when such a computer is achieved, they will initially only launch a graphene based computer which is only like 2 or 3 times faster. That alone should be enough for these companies to sell hundreds of millions of devices.

I was born in 1951...when computers were the size of buildings and used enough electricity to power small towns.

I've been following graphene since it's discovery. It's definitely a game changer. Those who predict the demise of moore's law are uninformed.

I assume it'll become Moore's law of Graphene?

Moore's law is a special case of a general principle.

Wow! Computers the size of buildings!! I can't even imagine that. We've surely come a long way since and if the potential of graphene is realised, we will be further along like never before.




and that was just the equivalent of the CPU...the input out put devices were HUGE...the powersupply was gigantic...it required climate control which was also quite large...

yup...all told it was the size of a building...cost millions of dollars and had less computing power than a modern day vacumn cleaner.

Consider my mind = blown!!!

heh...I used to work on that stuff.
I recall when I could OUT TYPE the system...I had to intentionally type slow.

As computers get faster, the demands upon them get bigger, so speed will never be apparant to the user. The means by which information is transmitted will be the biggest difference and the ability to multi-taks (an old catchphrase from the 90's).
I remember my Windows 3.11 being just as quick to use as my now Windows 8 computer is.
Lets hope the introduction of graphene is not 'drip-fed' to us in order to provide a continual consumer chain for profit.

Thanks @preppervetuk. I knew you were one to follow when I first commented on a post of yours. You have led me to several people that I now follow, and led me to some interesting post. Thanks. For @sauravrungta Thanks for this post, and I really enjoyed the Zombie Post.

Yes, if if it "drip-fed" as you say, then the speed won't be apparent but if they give us the full power (unlikely), then we will definitely feel it.

Have you met @cleverbot? He's really clever :)

Do you like music?

You are irrelevant entirely.

what's a floppy disk? :P

Hahah we have come so far! :)

Haha I have actually used some in my childhood :P

LOL I remember them, but I was more of a CD kinda kid... lol :)

This is amazing. I remember growing up with the idea of everything being run with super conductors. They were going to revolutionize the electrical industry. Components using so little power that there would no longer be a need for thick heavy and bulky wires to power homes. To my knowledge that has never come to fruition. I have not heard much about this idea in recent years, but this looks like one step closer. One question however; if our electronics are using so much less power for more technology, why do our phones use so much battery power and go dead within a day, as opposed to the "dumb" phone that would stay charged for a week or more? I'm a simple kind of guy, and this kind of baffles me.

The smartphones simply use more power because of a multitude of power hungry features that we continuously use on them. The lithium ion battery simply can't hold enough juice for all that functionality.

This just reaffirms my contention that technology is not always a good thing.

Two primary differences and some less primary ones: Screens nowadays are much larger and use far more power. The SoC (system on a chip (CPU, radio, etc)) is far more powerful nowadays. Battery tech is having a hard time keeping up with power consumption. So yeah, yay for graphene!

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