
Able to leap over tall memory stacks in a single bound
A boffin at North Carolina State University has developed
a computer chip that can store an entire library’s worth of information on a
single chip. The new chip uses nanodots, or nanoscale magnets, which
can store more than a billion pages of data on an inch square bit of material.
Dr. Jay Narayan, the John C. Fan Distinguished Chair
Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at NC State and author of the
research said that the nanodots are made of single, defect-free crystals,
creating magnetic sensors that are integrated directly into a silicon
electronic chip. These nanodots, which can be made uniformly and be six nm in
diameter. Since they are oriented in the same way - allowing programmers to
reliably read and write data to the chips.
They appear to be cheap to make, but need the right kind
of magnetic packaging so that users can interact with them.