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Monday, May 05, 2008 HP Rewires ElectronicsA new electronic device could lead to denser, faster kinds of memory, and processing chips that act more like the brain. By Kevin Bullis
A novel building block for electronic circuits has been developed by researchers at HP Labs. Called a memristor, it could be used to make extremely compact, low-power memory chips, as well as processors that mimic natural neural networks to perform tasks such as face recognition and controlling robots. The new memristors are inspired by a nearly 40-year-old theory. Electrical engineers build circuits out of three passive electronic devices: resistors, inductors, and capacitors. But in 1971, a researcher named Leon Chua predicted that a fourth device--the memristor--should be possible and that it would have useful electronic properties. Now the HP researchers have made a working memristor, showing that Chua was right. Memristors can be used as simple switches that turn current off and on, acting something like the transistors used in today's computer chips. But unlike transistors, which are engineered to flip quickly between just two distinct states, memristors can easily be set to a range of different resistance levels. What's more, once they're set, they remember the resistance setting. The ability to remember the setting makes them useful for faster, denser types of nonvolatile memory. What's more, memristors' ability to be set to a range of values makes them similar in some ways to the synapses between neurons in the brain. That could make them useful for chips that can learn to recognize faces and speech potentially much better than conventional computer chips can. They could also be useful in processors that allow robots to, for example, learn to walk. The device is actually very simple, says R. Stanley Williams, who led the work developing the memristor, which is described in the current issue of Nature. A memristor consists of two thin layers of titanium dioxide. These layers are sandwiched between two metal contacts. One of the layers of titanium dioxide has the normal ratio of titanium and oxygen atoms, but the other has fewer oxygen atoms than usual. The missing oxygen atoms create vacancies within the material, and these vacancies change its electronic properties. Ordinarily, titanium dioxide is an insulator, blocking the flow of electrons. But oxygen-deficient titanium dioxide readily conducts electrons. The device begins in the off position, with the layer of insulating titanium dioxide blocking current. But when the researchers apply a positive voltage to one of the metal contacts, the oxygen atoms move from one titanium dioxide layer to the other; as a result, oxygen vacancies exist in both layers. "When that happens, the resistance of the material drops dramatically," Williams says, allowing current to flow through the device. "We've actually built devices where the resistance of the device changes by six orders of magnitude." |
A New Memory Company
04/01/2008



Comments
nradonic@comcast.net on 05/08/2008 at 11:37 AM
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In inductors energy is stored magnetically. In capacitors energy is stored in the electric field. Resistors dissipate energy as charges accelerate through the electrical field and decelerate through thermal collisions with atoms in the resistor. I don't see an energy storage or dissipation phenomena with the ion migration and effective modulation of the conductive channel (like a FET). This looks more like a chemical battery, with conductance related to the charge level, but perhaps ion movement rather than electron movement.
Now, all that said, it looks like it will be a great memory device. It is small, and apparently nonvolatile, and easy to make. Great, lets make lots of them. Can it be read nondestructively? The more you read it the more the ions will migrate. Hmmm, looks like DRAM refresh cycles might be needed to correct for read cycle shifts.
mbenchim on 05/08/2008 at 12:53 PM
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