Title :
Beyond the silicon transistor: personal observations
Author :
Theis, Thomas N.
Author_Institution :
IBM T. J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
Abstract :
Will progress in the miniaturization of silicon transistors soon come to an end? Silicon pessimists and the proponents of revolutionary new devices and circuit architectures have been consistently wrong for decades. The author explores past, present, and possible futures of this elusive aspect of computing technology. Possible successors may be carbon nanotube transistors, DNA computing or quantum computing. The silicon transistor will certainly allow further rapid improvements in price and performance for at least another decade, but it might yet be succeeded by some molecular-scale device that exhibits amplification and is therefore essentially a drop-in in terms of circuits and system architectures.
Keywords :
biocomputing; biomolecular electronics; carbon nanotubes; computers; elemental semiconductors; integrated circuit design; quantum computing; semiconductor technology; silicon; technological forecasting; transistors; DNA computing; Si; Si transistor miniaturization; Si transistor prospects; amplifying molecular-scale devices; carbon nanotube transistors; computing circuits/system architectures; computing technology; quantum computing; silicon transistor successors; technical perspective; Circuits; Costs; Electron tubes; FETs; Information technology; Josephson junctions; Moore´s Law; Quantum computing; Silicon; Switches;
Journal_Title :
Computing in Science & Engineering
DOI :
10.1109/MCISE.2003.1166549