Transcript Big2Small
Notre Dame extended Research Community
History of Machines: Big to Small
Michael Crocker
Valerie Goss
Patrick Mooney
Rebecca Quardokus
1
Early “Computer” – 19th Century Loom
Joseph Marie
Jacquard
Programmable with punch cards
2
Difference Engine/Analytic Engine
Charles Babbage
(1822)
3
ENIAC – First Electrical Computer (1946)
Programmable with switches and cables
4
Smaller and Smaller Devices
Vacuum
Tube
(1946)
Discrete Transistors
(1955)
Integrated Circuits
(1960)
5
Computers Since 1971 (Intel 4004)
2-3 Thousand
Transistors
1-2 Billion
Transistors
92 Thousand
Instr/Sec
147 Billion
Instr/Sec
10 Megabytes
1 Terabyte
6
Moore’s Law
A predicted trend
Predicted in 1965 (will last at least 10 years)
Density doubles every two years
Also applies to speed and storage capacity
Prediction has lasted for 40+ years
With some minor exceptions
Transistors are very small now (<100nm)
Required Nanotechnology Research!
Exponential has lasted for 100+ years
7
Speed
and
Cost
8
45nm Node Transistors (2007)
Well inside the nano realm!
Fabrication of these transistors
requires very precise lithography
9
Fabrication
Photolithography
32nm half pitch: ~$4 Billion for fab facility
Double patterning, Immersion lithography
Electron Beam Lithography
A few nanometer feature size patterning
Limitation is scattering, not the beam!
Takes a long time, not mass production
Self Assembly
Not precise control
Instead, automatic arrangement
10
Self Assembly
11
Self Assembly with DNA!
Using DNA, it should be
possible to fabricate many
patterns without lithography
12
Imaging is Very Important
Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
Atomic Force Microscope (AFM)
Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)
Why are these important?
Nano devices are unknown
behaviors, properties, & uses
All at the nano-scale
Biological processes could tell us so much!
13