<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区

          Minuscule silicon chiplets: a new level of micro manufacturing

          Updated: 2013-04-21 07:50

          By John Markoff(The New York Times)

            Print Mail Large Medium  Small

           Minuscule silicon chiplets: a new level of micro manufacturing

          Tiny chiplets no larger than a grain of sand are suspended in a solution that can be printed onto surfaces. Amy Sullivan / PARC

          PALO ALTO, California - Under a microscope, four slivers of silicon - electronic circuits called chiplets - perform an elaborate, jerky dance as if controlled by a hidden puppet master. Then on command, they all settle with pinpoint accuracy, precisely touching a pattern of circuit wires, each at just the right point of contact.

          The technology, on display at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center, or PARC, is part of a new system for making electronics, one that takes advantage of a Xerox invention from the 1970s: the laser printer.

          If perfected, it could lead to desktop manufacturing plants that "print" the circuitry for a wide array of electronic devices - flexible smartphones that won't break when you sit on them; a supple, pressure-sensitive skin for a new breed of robot hands; smart-sensing medical bandages that could capture health data and then be thrown away.

          Today's chips are made on large wafers that hold hundreds of fingernail-sized dies, each with the same electronic circuit. The wafers are cut into individual dies and packaged separately, only to be reassembled on printed circuit boards, which may each hold dozens or hundreds of chips.

          The PARC researchers have a very different model in mind. With financing from the National Science Foundation and from Darpa, the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, they have designed a laser-printer-like machine that will place tens or even hundreds of thousands of chiplets, each no larger than a grain of sand, on a surface in exactly the right location and in the right orientation.

          The chiplets can be both microprocessors and computer memory as well as the other circuits needed to create complete computers.

          The new manufacturing system the PARC researchers envision could be used to build custom computers, or as part of a 3-D printing system that makes smart objects with computing woven into them.

          The researchers are years from placing tens or hundreds of thousands of circuits accurately in a fraction of a second. And they acknowledge that this would be only the first step in designing a commercially viable system.

          The research could have tremendous economic consequences - feeding the emergence of a new digital era in manufacturing, much as laser printing transformed publishing three decades ago.

          Minuscule silicon chiplets: a new level of micro manufacturing

          Eugene Chow is an electrical engineer who leads the PARC team that has designed the new technology, which they have dubbed "Xerographic micro-assembly." The technology breaks silicon wafers into tens of thousands of chiplets, bottles them as "ink" and then "prints" them, much as a Xerox laser printer puts toner on paper.

          "It's a crazy new revolutionary tool," he said.

          Already, more than half a dozen different printing techniques, from inkjet to gravure to offset printing, have been used to make electronic circuits - a business that was estimated at $9.4 billion last year.

          But the PARC researchers argue that all of the current commercialized techniques are limited in that they can't achieve the transistor density now available through conventional chip manufacturing. So while it is possible to use printing techniques to make a flexible display screen with hundreds or even thousands, of transistors, it cannot be done with millions or billions of transistors, like today's silicon chips.

          The new PARC technology is intended to address that shortcoming and bridge the two worlds by smearing computing power across areas much larger than today's postage stamp-sized chips.

          Greg Whiting, a senior research scientist at PARC, said, "This is a very different way to think about electronics."

          The New York Times

          (China Daily 04/21/2013 page11)

          主站蜘蛛池模板: 精品少妇后入一区二区三区| 办公室强奷漂亮少妇视频| 国产va精品免费观看| 亚洲一区二区三区十八禁| 色偷偷女人的天堂亚洲网| 国产成人女人在线观看| 欧美高清狂热视频60一70| 2021中文字幕亚洲精品| 日本一码二码三码的区分| 久久中文字幕综合不卡一二区| 中国少妇人妻xxxxx| 人妻无码不卡中文字幕系列| 久久99精品久久久久久齐齐百度| 国内不卡一区二区三区| 欧美性猛交xxx嘿人猛交| 日本一区二区三区黄色网| 91孕妇精品一区二区三区| 99精品伊人久久久大香线蕉| 免费精品一区二区中文字幕| 成人精品天堂一区二区三区| 久久99精品久久久久久9| 日韩av日韩av在线| 国产精品www夜色视频| 亚洲国产精品日韩在线 | 青青草无码免费一二三区| 亚洲精品区二区三区蜜桃| 痉挛高潮喷水av无码免费| 最新精品国偷自产在线| 久久亚洲精品中文字幕波多野结衣 | 国产在线观看免费观看| 国产精品黄色大片在线看| 女人腿张开让男人桶爽| 久久欧洲精品成av人片| 最新的国产成人精品2020| 国产高清在线精品一区二区三区| 人妻放荡乱h文| 在线观看热码亚洲av每日更新| 成码无人AV片在线电影网站| 国产精品亚洲А∨天堂免| 色吊丝二区三区中文字幕| 中国CHINA体内裑精亚洲日本|