Nano Ram Full Intro
Nano Ram Full Intro
Normally, with the nanotubes suspended above the electrode, a small voltage
applied between the terminal and upper electrode will result in no current flowing.
This represents a "0" state. However if a larger voltage is applied between the two
electrodes, the nanotubes will be pulled towards the upper electrode until they
touch it. At this point a small voltage applied between the terminal and upper
electrode will allow current to flow (nanotubes are conductors), representing a
"1" state. The state can be changed by reversing the polarity of the charge
applied to the two electrodes.
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 Van
der 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.
Currently the method of removing the unwanted nanotubes makes the system
impractical. The accuracy and size of the epitaxy 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.
Advantages
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 is
simply not enough charge being stored to be able to effectively read it. NRAM
appears to be limited only by the current state of the 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
ofcarbon 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 performance is largely determined by the total charge needed).
NRAM can theoretically reach performance similar to SRAM, which is faster than
DRAM but much less dense, and thus much more expensive.
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 performance 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.
CarbonNanotubes
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are a recently discovered allotrope of carbon. They
take the form of cylindrical carbon molecules and have novel properties that
make them potentially useful in a wide variety of applications in nanotechnology,
electronics, optics, and other fields of materials science. They exhibit
extraordinary strength and unique electrical properties, and are efficient
conductors of heat. Inorganic nanotubes have also been synthesized.
A nanotube is a member of the fullerene structural family, which also includes
buckyballs. Whereas buckyballs are spherical in shape, a nanotube is cylindrical,
with at least one end typically capped with a hemisphere of the buckyball
structure. Their name is derived from their size, since the diameter of a nanotube
is on the order of a few nanometers (approximately 50,000 times smaller than the
width of a human hair), while they can be up to several millimeters in length.
There are two main types of nanotubes: single-walled nanotubes (SWNTs) and
multi-walled nanotubes (MWNTs).
Fabrication Of NRAM
This nano electromechanical memory, called NRAM, is a memory with actual
moving parts, with dimensions measured in nanometers. Its carbon nanotube
based technology makes advantage of vaanderwaals force to create basic on off
junctions of a bit. Vaanderwaals forces interaction between atoms that enable
noncovalant binding. They rely on electron attractions that arise only at nano
scale levels as a force to be reckoned with. The company is using this property in
its design to integrate nanoscale material property with established cmos
fabrication technique.
Storage In NRAM
NRAM works by balancing the on ridges of silicon. Under differing electric
charges, the tubes can be physically swung into one or two positions
representing one and zeros. Because the tubes are very small-under a thousands
of time-this movement is very fast and needs very little power, and because the
tubes are a thousand times conductive as copper it is very to sense to read back
the data. Once in position the tubes stay there until a signal resets them.
The bit itself is not stored in the nano tubes, but rather is stored as the position of
the nanotube. Up is bit 0 and down is bit 1.Bits are switched between the states
by the application of the electric field.