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Engineers Create 1TB Fingernail-Sized Chip

by - source: Tom's Hardware US

NC State engineers created a new material that could provide 1 TB of storage in a fingernail-sized chip.

Imagine cramming 1 TB of data on a fingernail-sized chip. That's around fifty times the capacity of today's high-end silicon-based chips, and apparently engineers from North Carolina State University have mattered such a feat and developed a new material capable of handling incredibly large amounts of storage--the equivalent of 20 high-def DVDs--in an extremely small space.

The team of engineers was led by Jagdish "Jay" Narayan, director of the National Science Foundation Center for Advanced Materials and Smart Structures at N.C. State. According to this news release, the team made its breakthrough by adding an impurity to a material to change its properties (called selective doping). By working at the nanometer level, the engineers added nickel to magnesium oxide (a ceramic) and created a material with clusters of nickel atoms around 10 square nanometers in size.

“Instead of making a chip that stores 20 gigabytes, you have one that can handle one terabyte, or 50 times more data,” Narayan said. The new atoms are 90-percent smaller than the ones used today, and could lead to a boost in computer storage capacity, reduce heat produced by semiconductors, and enhance a vehicle's fuel economy by offering up to 80 miles per gallon.

80 miles to the gallon? How is this possible? It's all in the metallic properties dumped into the ceramics. Narayan said engineers could develop new engines using the new ceramic that could withstand twice the amount of heat endured by current engines. There's even mention of harnessing solar energy thanks to the thermal conductivity of the new material.

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skalagon 24/10/2009 13:41
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Wow thats good news.

Derbixrace 24/10/2009 18:35
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yeah good news, must have patience until they release multi TB ssd's then :D

technogiant 24/10/2009 19:33
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Trouble is the industry is so heavily invested in current technology/materials and the continued shrinkage of those processes that they wont even look at something more radical until they hit a brick wall with current tech.....so many seamingly good discoveries just fall by the way side and are never implimented any further than the boffins lab.

Anonymous 25/10/2009 23:22
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You will never see this used. The Big Hog companies will buy it out, nuff said. It isn't about saving the world anymore, its a conspiracy to make lots of cash.

Anonymous 26/10/2009 01:35
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Damn, those 90% smaller atoms must be really expensive.....I've tried getting atoms only 50% denser and had to buy them from an outrageously priced alternative dimension.

Pedantic, possibly.

But statements like "The new atoms are 90-percent smaller than the ones used today" are really bad science.

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