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This Is the End of the Silicon Chip, Here’s What’s Next - YouTube
Channel: Seeker
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Electronics keep getting smaller, and it’s
all thanks to electric switches called transistors.
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When these little fellas replaced vacuum tubes,
computers went from the size of entire rooms
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to merely the corner of a room.
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In the 60-odd years since, transistors have
kept shrinking, scaling down and powering
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up our electronics with them.
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But many think we are hitting a choke point…
what if we can’t make anything smaller?!
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Transistors have 3 terminals, a source, a
drain, and a gate.
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Current flows from the source and, if the
gate allows the electrons to pass, out the
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drain.
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You know how computer code is ones and zeros
at its most fundamental level?
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Well, this is where that physically happens.
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Current flowing through an open gate represents
a one, a closed gate and no current represents
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a zero.
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Pack thousands of these transistors together
and they can do calculations and act as a
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computer’s brain.
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Early computers had thousands of transistors,
but one way to build a better brain is to
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squeeze more transistors onto a chip, and
today’s chips could have billions.
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That means scaling all the parts of a transistor
down.
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Not only do smaller transistors allow for
a higher density, but it also means they can
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switch from on to off faster, so small is
good!
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Right now, commercially available chips typically
have transistors with gates about 14 to 20
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nm across, depending on the chip.
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The problem is, as gates get thinner, quantum
mechanics (the physics that govern tiny parts
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of atoms) start to come into play.
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For example, if the gates are too thin then
they won’t be able to stop electrons because
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the electrons will tunnel through.
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Not in a literal sense, they don’t bore
through the gate like an escaped convict.
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They tunnel in the quirky quantum sense, where
essentially electrons disappear on one side
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of the gate and reappear on the other.
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Eat your heart out, Andy Dufresne.
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If the gate is supposed to be closed to current
- meaning a zero - and it ain’t, that’s
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a big problem.
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Researchers predict that the lower limit for
silicon gate is 5 nm, and by 2021 it won’t
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be economically efficient to keep shrinking
transistors.
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So, where do we go when the laws of physics
stop the march of technological progress?
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Well, the good news is, there are other ways
of improving performance.
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Machine learning could help develop more efficient
algorithms to use with current transistors.
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Or, we could switch to light based computers
with optical gates.
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That, could actually boost performance 20
fold, though the hardware is a bit larger.
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Or, we could stop using silicon.
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Researchers have managed to make a transistor
out of molybdenum disulfide with a carbon
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nanotube gate thats just one nanometer across.
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It gets around electron tunneling because
electrons don’t flow as fast through the
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molybdenum disulfide as they do through silicon.
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But, mass production would probably be expensive,
it was hard enough to make the proof of concept.
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The point is, progress can happen even if
we can’t shrink.
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Keep in mind when transistors were first used
in a computer they were 20 times more expensive
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than vacuum tubes.
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Even though transistors were much costlier,
computer scientists knew they had more of
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an upside in the long run, and look where
that led us!
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...Watching cat videos on your phone while
you avoid eye contact on your commute to work.
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Thanks nerds!
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For more about the problems with ever shrinking
computers, watch this video on the end of
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Moore’s law and the whole new chip design they're proposing.
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Fun Fact: The first point-contact transistor
was invented in 1947, and it was made from
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strips of gold foil, a plastic triangle, then
pushed down on a germanium crystal.
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Boy have we come a long way.
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Thanks for watching
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