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Saturday, March 8, 2008

Graphene to pave way for new generation of faster mobiles, computers

Engineers have paved the way for a new generation of faster, more powerful cell phones, computers and other electronics by developing a practical technique to replace silicon with carbon on large surfaces.
The developers of this novel technique that harnesses the power of carbon for more powerful electronics are Princeton nanotechnologist Stephen Chou, professor of electrical engineering and graduate student Xiaogan Liang.
Stephen Chou said that the capabilities of silicon, the material at the heart of computer chips, has been harnessed beyond its limits by engineers, and carbon has come up as an intriguing replacement for the same. The material called graphene which is a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb lattice, could let electronics to process information and produce radio transmissions 10 times better than silicon-based devices. However, switching from silicon to carbon has not been possible until now because technologists thought that they needed graphene material in the same form as the silicon used to make chips- a single crystal of material eight or 12-inches wide. Till date, the largest single-crystal graphene sheets made have not been wider than a couple millimeters, which is not big enough for a single chip. The researchers realized that a big graphene wafer is not needed, until they could place small crystals of graphene only in the active areas of the chip. A novel method was thus developed, in order to achieve this goal and demonstrated it by making high-performance working graphene transistors. "Our approach is to completely abandon the classical methods that industry has been using for silicon integrated circuits," said Chou. In the new method, the researchers made a special stamp consisting of a collection of tiny flat-topped pillars, each one-tenth of a millimeter wide. They pressed the pillars against a block of graphite (pure carbon), cutting thin carbon sheets, sticking to the pillars. The stamp was then removed, peeling away a few atomic layers of graphene. Finally, the stamp was aligned with and pressed against a larger wafer, leaving the patches of graphene exactly where transistors will be built. Chou said that the technique was just like printing. By repeating the process and using variously shaped stamps (the researchers also made strips instead of round pillars), all the active areas for transistors are covered with single crystals of graphene.
"Previously, scientists have been able to peel graphene sheets from graphite blocks, but they had no control over the size and location of the pieces when placing them on a surface," said Chou. The technique was possible through one innovation - to coat the stamp with a special material that sticks to carbon when it is cold and releases when it is warm, allowing the same stamp to pick up and release the graphene. Chou's lab took the next step and built transistors -- tiny on-off switches -- on their printed graphene crystals. Their transistors displayed high performance and were more than 10 times faster than silicon transistors in moving "electronic holes" which is a key measure of speed.
This new technology could find almost immediate use in radio electronics, such as cell phones and other wireless devices that require high power output, Chou said. Chou predicted that the technique could be applied to wireless communication devices within a few year, depending on the level of interest from industries. "What we have done is shown that this approach is possible; the next step is to scale it up," said Chou.


Nokia E90 Communicator

The Nokia E90 Communicator has pretty much every feature you could want in a Vodafone mobile, plus a few you didn't know existed, but at this price you'd expect it.
The E90 costs $1699, making it the most expensive phone for sale in Vodafone's online shop. The successor to the 9500, the E90 is like a business version of the N95.
First of all, it's big, and it's heavy. It brings back memories of the "brick" models from the mid-90s. The Communicator brand covers business mobiles that open to reveal keyboards for thumb typing. Compared to a normal mobile the E90 is a big boy, but it's quick, surfing the Net at 3G HSDPA speeds (up to 3.6 Mbps). The phone face has a roughly 2-inch screen with 240 x 320 pixels and 16 million colours. Navigation is by a central push-pad with a direction ring around it.
Open it up and it becomes more of a work device than a phone, with a full qwerty thumb-keyboard. Along the top are eight shortcut buttons for the desktop, messaging, web, calendar and one you can set yourself. These shortcut buttons really aid the usability of the phone. Getting to the function you want is much quicker and easier than with the N95.
The inner screen is very big (4 inch diagonally, but really wide) and very clear (800 x 352 pixels, 16 million colours).
I found the operating system (Symbian 9.2) easier to use than previous high-end Nokias, probably because the extras and bigger screen make it easier to see where to go.
Feature-wise, this phone does not mess around. If you've seen a mobile with a feature, it's probably on the E90. Here's a quick but not complete rundown of the other features -- camera (3.2MP), video camera (pretty good), video calling (camera for your face is on the inside), GPS, push email, Bluetooth, infrared, Wi-Fi, media player (pretty good, though the controls aren't the best -- plays MP3, AAC and Mpeg4), high speed internet, a barcode reader, a text-to-speech message reader, voice controls and dialling, FM radio, a word processor, a spreadsheet, presentation software, and support for pdfs and Zip files. You can create text, MS Word and Excel files. There's also a neat feature called "active notes", which lets you add contacts and multimedia to your text notes. These can be linked to contacts in your address book, so when they call or text you the note pops up to remind you of stuff. The keyboard is easy to use with your thumbs or fingers. The 3.2MP camera is also pretty good. It's a business phone, so it's hard to judge it too harshly. The brownish plastic looks classy and woodlike and it definitely feels solid and well-made. On the side are shortcuts for the voice recorder and camera shutter.
Battery life is specced at 5 hours talk time, 14 days standby. Is it perfect? No. It's sometimes a bit slow to respond, though not as slow as the N95 was. It's not great for web surfing either, because the screen, while it's wide, isn't very deep. That means you do a lot of scrolling on web pages.