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Ai
07-04-2006, 04:11 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/ptech/06/26/fast.chip.ap/index.html

ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- A super-cooled computer chip has shattered speed records for silicon-based electronics, but don't expect your PC to hum along at 500 gigahertz anytime soon.

The chip only ran at the high speed when it was cooled to 451 degrees below zero -- just 8 degrees above absolute zero, the coldest temperature possible in nature, researchers at IBM Corp. and Georgia Tech said.

Still, researchers believe they can improve the technology so that high speeds can be reached at room temperature -- a development that could lead to advances in cell phones, radar technology and space exploration, among other applications.

The typical cell phone chip today runs at 2 GHz, while the highest-end PC microprocessors run at less than 4 GHz.

"The industry always wants more. People are always wondering how far silicon can take us," said John Cressler, a professor with Georgia Tech's School of Electrical and Computer Engineering. "And this should show there's a lot of mileage left to go."

Cressler and a team of 22 scientists and graduate students forged the chip by melding silicon with atoms of the element germanium, a process so fragile that even the tiniest miscue could evaporate their work.

It took researchers nine months to invent a new process to clock the chip by injecting liquid helium into a probing station. Scientists can view the process through a powerful electronic microscope zoomed to see the tiny chip, only a few thousandths of a millimeter wide.

Silicon remains the cheapest and easiest material to mass produce, and researchers say this latest development is an important step in showing the electronics industry the speeds that silicon-based chips could reach.

The previous speed for a silicon-based chip, set at room temperature, was 375 GHz. While the Georgia Tech team's chip set a slightly lower speed at the same temperature -- about 350 GHz -- Cressler said there is plenty of room to improve.

"This is a first look at what the limits can be," Cressler said. "I'm hoping this record can be broken a few times."





Wonder when i can buy that chip....:doindadom ...Imagine playing a game on it...:headbang:

Cursive
07-04-2006, 04:25 AM
Hmm, how do I put this?
Hmm, well the only way I can think of is, HOLY ****!
That would be crazy.
Although, I don't think it is very possible to enjoy playing a game at -451 degrees.

dragoneyes001
07-04-2006, 07:08 AM
if your willing to actually machine the block and plumbing you could create a liquid hydrogen cooled system this should be able to keep your system in the minus 200's. but one mistake this article made was the current pc speeds which do surpass 4.0Ghz by as much as 1.0 the newest chips being made public may just surpass this as well.

it will be nice when they start to make chips available that top 50-100Ghz but so many parts need to be created that could handle the change in speed : MB's , Memory , GPU's and all the cooling that these will need to keep the box at room temp.

Ai
07-04-2006, 07:19 AM
Rofl....

How awesome would that be...

Sales: So Why Do You Want A Tank Of Liquid Nitrogen?
You: Well I'm Thinking Of Making A "Small" Upgrade To My System..

rofl...Liquid Nitrogen cooling system...That would take up alot of room...And if you didn't make sure your preasures were right the whole thing would be springing leaks all over the place..

Cursive
07-04-2006, 07:21 AM
(Keeps out of this conversation.)
(Is also very confuzzled.)

dragoneyes001
07-04-2006, 07:24 AM
Rofl....
How awesome would that be...
Sales: So Why Do You Want A Tank Of Liquid Nitrogen?
You: Well I'm Thinking Of Making A "Small" Upgrade To My System..
rofl...Liquid Nitrogen cooling system...That would take up alot of room...And if you didn't make sure your preasures were right the whole thing would be springing leaks all over the place..


the beauty of liquid nitrogen is as it warms it gases so it wants to move pretty much on its own so you dont need to add additional pressurisation.

the biggest drawback is the cost of keeping the liquid nitrogen liquid in the outboard container <<< not cheap.

what you need is proper plumbing so that when it warms it automatically pushes itself towards the outboard containment and in doing so forces more liquid to replace itself. simply put you need check valves built in that can function at extreme cold.

Ai
07-04-2006, 07:29 AM
Indeed...The pipes and fixtures would have to endure extreme Cold..but they'd also have to endure extreme changes in temperature...

But if you figured it correctly you could probably just house a Tank of it in a empty Tower and simply connect the two towers together with the plumbing running through the sides of them...

Basically it would just look like two towers placed together...

But if you were gonna have a CPU that ran at that speeds then you would seriously need to make sure that the rest of your system was up to par...

dragoneyes001
07-04-2006, 07:41 AM
Indeed...The pipes and fixtures would have to endure extreme Cold..but they'd also have to endure extreme changes in temperature...
But if you figured it correctly you could probably just house a Tank of it in a empty Tower and simply connect the two towers together with the plumbing running through the sides of them...
Basically it would just look like two towers placed together...
But if you were gonna have a CPU that ran at that speeds then you would seriously need to make sure that the rest of your system was up to par...

that was my first thought board GPU memory ...etc all would need to run at the relative speeds or having the chip that quick would amount to nothing.

dragoneyes001
07-04-2006, 07:45 AM
heres a thought forget having a tower encase the new chip and board as well as all its other additions into a sealed box thats emerged into a liquid hydrogen tank only the connection cables come out (no plumbing needed )

just dont expect to do quick memory changes lol.



ooops thought i'd hit edit sorry wasn't suposed to be a double post.